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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Broughal v Walsh Brothers Builders Ltd & Anor [2018] EWCA Civ 1610 (10 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/1610.html Cite as: [2018] WLR 5781, [2018] 1 WLR 5781, [2018] EWCA Civ 1610, [2018] WLR(D) 428 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT CENTRAL LONDON
HH Judge Baucher
A35YM461
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN
and
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
____________________
Nigel Broughal |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) Walsh Brothers Builders Limited (2) Zurich Insurance PLC |
Defendants/ Respondents |
____________________
Mr Christian DuCann (instructed by DAC Beachcroft Claims Ltd) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 24 May 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"Permission to appeal the order of 1st August is refused on the grounds there is no real prospect of success nor any other compelling reason why an appeal should be heard CPR 52.3(6)(a)&(b). The Appellant accepted in the court below he was in breach of the order dated 19th April. On appeal that is not accepted. There is no explanation for the change in position. The District Judge applied the three stage approach in Denton and his decision was one he was entitled to make. There is no basis to interfere with that decision."
She also refused permission to appeal against the 14 April order simply because no proper reasons were given for the application being out of time.
"2. This very point is raised by the learned editors of the White Book at 52.3.18, page 1680 of the 2016 edition, where they lend support to the practical problems if circuit judges were precluded from hearing substantive appeals in cases where they had initially refused permission on paper, the practical problems being that there are going to be very few other judges available to hear such an application. There is at this moment in time a chronic shortage of civil judges and that word "chronic" is out of the mouth of the Lord Chief. Recorders as a matter of course do not hear appeals. I had even taken the precaution today once that telephone call had been made to see if there was any possibility of work being transferred or any other judge being available and the list office have advised that there is no such judge and, further, matters have been compounded by a judge being ill and therefore unavailable and the urgent judge having to be allocated to hear another matter.
3. I have set out my reasons for refusing appeal on paper, as I am required to do. There is no good reason at all for me not to hear this appeal, there is no apparent bias and, in my view, there is no real possibility of bias. I ask myself the rhetorical questions what would the appellant's position have been had this matter been listed before His Honour Judge Saggerson? Again, it shows that we cannot have litigants hand-picking their court and their venue. It follows, therefore, the application is refused."
"It follows from the foregoing that the correct approach to this application for the recusal of members of this court is objective and the onus of establishing it rests upon the applicant. The question is whether a reasonable, objective and informed person would on the correct facts reasonably apprehend that the judge has not or will not bring an impartial mind to bear on the adjudication of the case, that is a mind open to persuasion by the evidence and the submissions of counsel. The reasonableness of the apprehension must be assessed in the light of the oath of office taken by the judges to administer justice without fear or favour; and their ability to carry out that oath by reason of their training and experience. It must be assumed that they can disabuse their minds of any irrelevant personal beliefs or predispositions. They must take into account the fact that they have a duty to sit in any case in which they are not obliged to recuse themselves. At the same time, it must never be forgotten that an impartial judge is a fundamental prerequisite for a fair trial and a judicial officer should not hesitate to recuse herself or himself if there are reasonable grounds on the part of a litigant for apprehending that the judicial officer, for whatever reasons, was not or will not be impartial."
"By contrast, a real danger of bias might well be thought to arise if there were personal friendship or animosity between the judge and any member of the public involved in the case; or if the judge were closely acquainted with any member of the public involved in the case, particularly if the credibility of that individual could be significant in the decision of the case; or if, in a case where the credibility of any individual were an issue to be decided by the judge, he had in a previous case rejected the evidence of that person in such outspoken terms as to throw doubt on his ability to approach such person's evidence with an open mind on any later occasion; or if on any question at issue in the proceedings before him the judge had expressed views, particularly in the course of the hearing, in such extreme and unbalanced terms as to throw doubt on his ability to try the issue with an objective judicial mind (see Vakauta v. Kelly (1989) 167 C.L.R. 568); or if, for any other reason, there were real ground for doubting the ability of the judge to ignore extraneous considerations, prejudices and predilections and bring an objective judgment to bear on the issues before him. The mere fact that a judge, earlier in the same case or in a previous case, had commented adversely on a party or witness, or found the evidence of a party or witness to be unreliable, would not without more found a sustainable objection. In most cases, we think, the answer, one way or the other, will be obvious. But if in any case there is real ground for doubt, that doubt should be resolved in favour of recusal."
"But the judge deciding an apprehended bias claim is not and never can be a lay observer. In order to determine the likely attitude of a fair-minded lay observer, the judge must be clothed with the mantle of someone the judge is not. One must avoid the natural temptation to view the judicial conduct, state of knowledge, association or interest in question through the eyes of a professional judge. An apprehension of bias by pre-judgment is based on a perception of human weakness. Given the double use of "might" in the current formulation of the test for apprehended bias, one must be particularly careful not to attribute to the lay observer judicial qualities of discernment, detachment and objectivity which judges take for granted in each other."
"44. Older authorities contain statements about the asserted special capacity of adjudicators, especially judges, because of their training and experience, to bring a detached mind to the task in hand whatever their earlier stated opinions might suggest. It was on this basis that the old rules requiring affirmative proof of a "real danger" of bias were stated. Part of the reason for the eventual retreat from this approach is undoubtedly the growing inclination of parties to litigation, and also many members of the public, to regard such assertions with scepticism. To some extent, this change of attitude may be a product of higher levels of education and social awareness. In part, it may reflect public attitudes to all institutions, especially where claims are made based on unproved assertions by those affected. In part, it may be a consequence of the growth in the judiciary and other adjudicative bodies and the greater willingness of members of the legal profession to challenge things that once would have been left alone.
…..
53. The attributes of the fictitious bystander to whom courts defer have therefore been variously stated. Such a person is not a lawyer. Yet neither is he or she a person wholly uninformed and uninstructed about the law in general or the issue to be decided. Being reasonable and fair-minded, the bystander, before making a decision important to the parties and the community, would ordinarily be taken to have sought to be informed on at least the most basic considerations relevant to arriving at a conclusion founded on a fair understanding of all the relevant circumstances. The bystander would be taken to know commonplace things, such as the fact that adjudicators sometimes say, or do, things that they might later wish they had not, without necessarily disqualifying themselves from continuing to exercise their powers. The bystander must also now be taken to have, at least in a very general way, some knowledge of the fact that an adjudicator may properly adopt reasonable efforts to confine proceedings within appropriate limits and to ensure that time is not wasted. The fictitious bystander will also be aware of the strong professional pressures on adjudicators (reinforced by the facilities of appeal and review) to uphold traditions of integrity and impartiality. Acting reasonably, the fictitious bystander would not reach a hasty conclusion based on the appearance evoked by an isolated episode of temper or remarks to the parties or their representatives, which was taken out of context. Finally, a reasonable member of the public is neither complacent nor unduly sensitive or suspicious."
"[2] The observer who is fair-minded is the sort of person who always reserves judgment on every point until she has seen and fully understood both sides of the argument. She is not unduly sensitive or suspicious, as Kirby J observed in Johnson v Johnson (2000) 201 CLR 488, 509, para 53. Her approach must not be confused with that of the person who has brought the complaint. The "real possibility" test ensures that there is this measure of detachment. The assumptions that the complainer makes are not to be attributed to the observer unless they can be justified objectively. But she is not complacent either. She knows that fairness requires that a judge must be, and must be seen to be, unbiased. She knows that judges, like anybody else, have their weaknesses. She will not shrink from the conclusion, if it can be justified objectively, that things that they have said or done or associations that they have formed may make it difficult for them to judge the case before them impartially.
[3] Then there is the attribute that the observer is "informed". It makes the point that, before she takes a balanced approach to any information she is given, she will take the trouble to inform herself on all matters that are relevant. She is the sort of person who takes the trouble to read the text of an article as well as the headlines. She is able to put whatever she has read or seen into its overall social, political or geographical context. She is fair-minded, so she will appreciate that the context forms an important part of the material which she must consider before passing judgment."
"Southwark's representatives could have been in no doubt that all the views which the Chairman proceeded to give on 12 March were expressed to be preliminary views, and that included the view that the way Southwark treated Mr Jiminez was appalling. I have some difficulty in understanding why a strongly expressed view cannot be a provisional view, leaving it open to the party criticised to persuade the Tribunal as to why that view was wrong and why the party's conduct was justified. Of course the more trenchant the view, the more the attachment of the label "preliminary" may need scrutiny to see whether the view was truly preliminary and not a concluded view. But it is in my judgment unduly cynical to reject the repeated assertions that the views were preliminary thoughts or views, particularly when the Tribunal have gone to the trouble of pointing out the various matters which needed to be addressed in the submissions directions for which were given. It is not inconsistent with the preliminary nature of the views that the various points would, if not answered to the Tribunal's satisfaction, leave Mr Jiminez successful in his claims against Southwark. If the Tribunal had really closed their minds to the possibility that Southwark might answer their concerns satisfactory, they need not have bothered to set out those concerns. Particularly in the light of the Chairman's comments, I can see no proper basis for doubting the genuiness of the Tribunal in saying that the views were only preliminary. Nor does the encouragement of a settlement show that the Tribunal's views were fixed."
"I am of the opinion that the claim not merely has 'little prospect of success' but that it has no reasonable prospect of success for the following reasons."
"Even after the label "judgment" has been removed from the document of 20 July 2005, it is on its face plainly and unequivocally suffused with a concluded view as to Mr Ezsias's prospects of success. It begins with the expression of an opinion that Mr Ezsias's contentions "have no reasonable prospect of success". Although the only matter receiving immediate attention at the time was the application for a deposit which is governed by the weaker test of "little prospect of success", the chair proceeded to say of the whistleblowing claim that she was of the opinion that it had "no reasonable prospect of success". The word "no" was underlined for emphasis by the chair herself. Her final observation on this aspect of the case was as I have already set out above. As I have set out, she went on to express herself in similar terms in relation to what I would call the more conventional unfair dismissal claim. I shall say no more about that because it is common ground that for present purposes it stands or falls with the whistleblowing claim."
"[23] In my judgment the present case falls clearly on the other side of the line. What the chair said in the document of 20 July 2005 was not said at the time to be a provisional or preliminary view. On the contrary, it was clearly stated in concluded terms. What she later said to the Employment Appeal Tribunal by way of explanation was, in the view of Elias J, enough to acquit her of actual pre-determination but it did not and could not displace the perception which any fair minded and informed observer would have formed, namely that there was a real possibility that she had a concluded view or a closed mind as regards Mr Ezsias's prospect of success. Elias J put it in this way:"
"Any fair minded and informed observer would in my view have considered that to put it at its lowest there was very little prospect that the Appellant would be able to shift her from her view. I do not think that her comments at the second hearing would sufficiently have dispelled that impression.""
"35. But the ordinary case is far from those instances. It is of the kind that has happened here: the judge in question has not himself had to resolve the case's factual merits, and has not expressed himself incontinently. All he has done is to conclude on the material before him that the result arrived at in the court below was correct. And he has done so in the knowledge that, at the option of the applicant, his view may be reconsidered at an oral hearing. In such a case is there a reasonable basis for supposing that he may not bring an open mind to bear on the substantive appeal if, after permission granted by another judge, he is a member of the court constituted to deal with it?
36. I consider, in line with a submission made by Mr Pollock, that an affirmative answer to this question would travel beyond whatever is the perception of our courts and judges that may be entertained by the fair-minded and informed observer, whoever he may be. It is not only lawyers and judges who in various states of affairs may be invited — they may invite themselves — to change their minds. Absent special circumstances a readiness to change one's mind upon some issue, whether upon new information or simply on further reflection, and to change it from a previously declared position, is a capacity possessed by anyone prepared and able to engage with the issue on a reasonable and intelligent basis. It is surely a commonplace of all the professions, indeed of the experience of all thinking men and women.
(6) Who is the fair-minded and informed observer?
37. Our fair-minded and informed observer must surely have these matters in mind. That does not turn him into a notional lawyer. It merely reflects his fair-mindedness. However much we may in the name of public confidence be prepared to clothe our observer with a veil of ignorance, surely we should not attribute to him so pessimistic a view of his fellow-man's own fair-mindedness as to make him suppose that the latter cannot or may not change his mind when faced with a rational basis for doing so. That is, I think, what this case involves: not merely the ascription to the notional bystander of a putative opinion about the thought-processes of a judge, but the ascription of a view about how any thinking, reasonable person might conduct himself or herself when, in a professional setting, he or she is asked to depart from an earlier expressed opinion. The view which Miss O'Rourke submits should be ascribed to the bystander does much less than justice, I think, to the ordinary capacities of such a person. In my judgment, therefore, it is not a view which the fair-minded and informed observer would entertain."
"45. However, on further consideration I have concluded that the nature of the decision being made by the single Lord Justice at that stage is sufficiently different from that required on the hearing of the substantive appeal for any allegation of an appearance of bias to be seen as unfounded. When making a decision on the papers whether or not to grant permission to appeal, the single Lord Justice is well aware that, though his decision may prove to be final, there exists the opportunity for the applicant to renew his application orally in open court. In other words, if the decision on the papers is not accepted, it can be reconsidered. In that sense, it remains, despite the change in the wording of the procedural rules, a potentially provisional decision.
46. This is borne out by the fact that none of the parties appearing before us on this application seeks to suggest that the same judge should not hear the oral argument on any renewed application for permission to appeal. This is a recognition that he is to be seen objectively as still having a sufficiently open mind at that stage to be able to act impartially. If that is so, then how can it be that a judge who refuses permission on the papers and then has no further contact with the case until the substantive appeal hearing is to be seen as having a closed mind and lacking the requisite impartiality?
47. One important factor which exists both at a renewed application hearing and at a substantive appeal hearing is the benefit enjoyed by the court of listening to oral argument. This is a fundamental part of our system of justice and it is a process which as a matter of common experience can be markedly more effective than written argument. It will be evident from what has been said earlier in this judgment that, before hearing oral argument in this case, I had some considerable sympathy for the applicant's arguments. The process of oral debate has persuaded me that those arguments are unsound. I mention this simply as one example of the impact which oral submissions may have under our system on the decision-making process. Yet it is a feature absent from the process by which the decision by the single judge on the papers is arrived at. This too seems to me to be a significant distinction between that decision and the subsequent one which the full court is called upon to make on the substantive appeal.
48. I am conscious that in stressing these differences I am drawing on my own experience as a judge, whereas one is concerned for present purposes with the way in which a fair-minded and informed observer would regard these procedures. It is not easy for a professional judge to put himself or herself in the position of an ordinary litigant or member of the public who does not possess such insight into and experience of the judicial decision-making process. Yet that is what has to be done if proper regard is to be had for the need to maintain public confidence in our procedures. However, the application before us postulates that the fair-minded and informed observer knows of the refusal of permission on the papers, since that is the very foundation of the allegation of bias. Such an observer must also be taken to know that such a refusal is not the end of the road, because the matter has progressed to a full appeal hearing, and it is therefore to be assumed that an observer who is indeed "informed" is conscious of the sequence of procedures between the initial lodging of the written Appellant's Notice seeking permission to appeal and the substantive appeal hearing. That degree of knowledge is sufficient for him to conclude that there is no real possibility of bias, because it is the existence and nature of those procedural stages which, to my mind, lead properly to the conclusion that the judge in question still retains an open mind at the substantive appeal hearing. An uninformed observer might think differently, but no system can guard itself against criticism by the uninformed, nor does it need to adapt itself in what would be a vain attempt to deflect such criticism."
Lord Justice Moylan :
Lord Justice Hamblen :