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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hussain v Vaswani & Ors [2021] EWCA Civ 146 (10 February 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/146.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Civ 146 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS, BUSINESS LIST (CHANCERY DIVISION)
Mann J
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
and
LORD JUSTICE NUGEE
____________________
RIZWAN HUSSAIN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) GULRAJ VASWANI (2) SAROJ VASWANI (3) KRITI VASWANI |
Respondents |
____________________
The Respondents did not appear and were not represented
Hearing date : 4 February 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Arnold:
Introduction
The GCRO
"4.1 A general civil restraint order may be made by –
…
(2) a judge of the High Court; or
…,
where the party against whom the order is made persists in issuing claims or making applications which are totally without merit, in circumstances where an extended civil restraint order would not be sufficient or appropriate.
4.2 Unless the court otherwise orders, where the court makes a general civil restraint order, the party against whom the order is made –
(1) will be restrained from issuing any claim or making any application in –
…
(b) the High Court or the County Court if the order has been made by a judge of the High Court; or
…,
without first obtaining the permission of a judge identified in the order;
(2) may apply for amendment or discharge of the order provided he has first obtained the permission of a judge identified in the order; and
(3) may apply for permission to appeal the order and if permission is granted, may appeal the order.
4.3 Where a party who is subject to a general civil restraint order –
(1) issues a claim or makes an application in a court identified in the order without first obtaining the permission of a judge identified in the order, the claim or application will automatically be struck out or dismissed –
(a) without the judge having to make any further order; and
(b) without the need for the other party to respond to it;
(2) repeatedly makes applications for permission pursuant to that order which are totally without merit, the court may direct that if the party makes any further application for permission which is totally without merit, the decision to dismiss that application will be final and there will be no right of appeal, unless the judge who refused permission grants permission to appeal.
4.4 A party who is subject to a general civil restraint order may not make an application for permission under paragraphs 4.2(1) or 4.2(2) without first serving notice of the application on the other party in accordance with paragraph 4.5.
4.5 A notice under paragraph 4.4 must –
(1) set out the nature and grounds of the application; and
(2) provide the other party with at least 7 days within which to respond.
4.6 An application for permission under paragraphs 4.2(1) or 4.2(2) –
(1) must be made in writing;
(2) must include the other party's written response, if any, to the notice served under paragraph 4.4; and
(3) will be determined without a hearing."
"The court must protect the integrity of its own process and must also protect future would-be defendants from similar abusive conduct. The imposition of GCROs will not, of course, prevent the Respondents from commencing proceedings or making applications if they are able to satisfy a judge that it is proper to do so. I therefore make GCROs against both Respondents."
The Committal Order
The application
"I am anxious to expedite this matter bearing in mind that Mr Hussain is in custody. However I am struggling to understand why the procedure set out in CPR 81.31 has not been followed. Surely that sets out the procedure for the making the application that he seeks? For clarity's sake I have made an order requiring that any application for discharge of Mr Hussain is to be made to be me."
"Discharge of a person in custody
(1) A person committed to prison for contempt of court may apply to the court to be discharged.
(2) The application must—
(a) be in writing and attested by the governor of the prison (or any other officer of the prison not below the rank of principal officer);
(b) show that the person committed to prison for contempt has purged, or wishes to purge, the contempt; and
(c) be served on the person (if any) at whose instance the warrant of committal was issued at least one day before the application is made.
(3) Paragraph (2) does not apply to—
(a) a warrant of committal to which CCR Order 27 rule 8 , or CCR Order 28 rule 4 or 14 relates; or
(b) an application made by the Official Solicitor acting with official authority for the discharge of a person in custody.
(4) If the committal order is made in a county court and—
(a) does not direct that any application for discharge must be made to a judge; or
(b) was made by a district judge under section 118 of the County Courts Act 1984 ,
the application for discharge may be made to a district judge.
(5) If the committal order is made in the High Court, the application for discharge may be made to a single judge of the division in which the committal order was made."
"Applications to discharge committal orders
(1) A defendant against whom a committal order has been made may apply to discharge it.
(2) Any such application shall be made by an application notice under Part 23 in the contempt proceedings.
(3) The court hearing such an application shall consider all the circumstances and make such order under the law as it thinks fit."
"The question for me is not whether an application to purge would succeed, but whether there is sufficient material to lead to the conclusion that he [h]as at least an arguable case for placing before the judge. Bearing in mind, as I do, that this is an application affecting Mr Hussain's liberty, I apply an even lower threshold. Despite that, the application fails.
First, there is nothing for this court in the point which suggests that Mr Hussain has the right to challenge a sentence which ought not to have been imposed. He does of course have that right, and he exercised it unsuccessfully when he appealed to the Court of Appeal. Nothing in his present application goes to the unlawfulness of his detention. The reference to a right to apply to the judge contained in the warrant is, in the circumstances, constrained by the civil restraint order against Mr Hussain.
Next, it is suggested that Mr Hussain's prison conditions are rather worse than the judge contemplated, which justifies a reduction in his sentence. Now that I have seen the judgment of the judge it is apparent that the judge made a significant reduction to reflect the adverse conditions likely to arise out of Covid-19. I can see no arguably material change (which is all Mr Hussain would have to suggest) which might justify a further reduction. There may be differences but in my view it is clear that they would have no real effect on the sentence. Mr Hussain does not have an automatic right to apply to the judge – he is now under the constraints of a CRO. He must establish an arguable case fit for a further hearing – he has not done so.
Next, there is a suggestion in Mr Tear's submissions that he wishes to purge by complying with the payment part of his undertaking. That is not, so far as I can see, founded in any reliable piece of evidence. And there is no explanation as to why that is possible now when it was not possible earlier when Mr Hussain was faced with the prospect of prison. As I understand it, he was pleading that the matter was beyond his control. If that is correct then prison life does not affect the position. If the 'beyond his control' source of the money has decided to pay it, then it can say so and demonstrate that it will. That might be a ground for reducing the coercive element of the sentence, but that will depend on the quality of the evidence.
…
As I have observed previously, the applicable prison regime is not a matter for the courts. It is a matter for the prison service."
The appeal
Lord Justice Nugee:
Lord Justice Lewison: