![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hunt v Annolight Ltd & Ors [2021] EWCA Civ 1663 (10 November 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/1663.html Cite as: [2022] WLR 701, [2022] PNLR 6, [2022] Costs LR 425, [2022] 2 All ER 649, [2022] 1 WLR 701, [2021] EWCA Civ 1663, [2021] WLR(D) 565 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2022] 1 WLR 701] [View ICLR summary: [2021] WLR(D) 565] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Mr Justice Saini
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
and
LORD JUSTICE WARBY
____________________
JOHN HUNT |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(3) ANNOLIGHT LIMITED (5) DOUBLE T GLASS LIMITED (6) PARAGON TRADE FRAMES LIMITED - and - (7) WALKER PRESTONS SOLICITORS LIMITED |
Defendants/ Respondents Defendant/Appellant |
____________________
Nikhil Arora (instructed by DAC Beachcroft Claims Limited) for Annolight Limited
Douglas Denton (instructed by BLM LLP) for Paragon Trade Frames Limited
Double T Glass Limited did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 19 October 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Newey:
Basic facts
"No – I accept that I was born in March 1946, but I have never been a Director of Annolight Limited."
"… any response or responses to that Application Notice are to be made by way of Witness Statements with a statement of Truth to be filed by 4:00pm on 24 January 2020. Any Witness Statement from Walker Prestons must be made by the supervising Partner with conduct of this claim."
"It is the Defendants' position that the Claimant's solicitor failed to obtain proper instructions on the issue of the Claimant previously being a Director of the Third Defendant company. It is contended that if proper instructions had been obtained, it would have been apparent that the Claimant had no claim against the Third Defendant and should discontinue. Further, if the case had been properly conducted, the Claimant's Solicitor would have advised the Claimant of the same and the claim would not have been pursued or would have been discontinued at an early stage so that the costs incurred by the Defendants in meeting the claim would have been avoided."
Mr Mitchell went on to refer to "concerns" about the signature on the 9 May 2019 Part 18 response, continuing:
"I await evidence from Walker Prestons in this regard, but if the replies were signed without the Claimant's knowledge then unnecessary time and costs have been incurred in this claim which is the fault of whoever signed the replies without knowledge of the Claimant, if that is indeed the case. If Walker Prestons did not sign the replies and these were signed by the Claimant, then the Claimant has been dishonest as documents show that he was a Director of the Third Defendant company."
"You will note [Paragon's] application, which appears at page 89 in the bundle, and whilst we adopt the position taken by [Annolight], there is an issue concerning the medical report of Mr Zeitoun and you will note, your Honour, that whilst [Mr Hunt's] solicitor, Mr Sarwar, has produced a witness statement dealing with [Annolight's] application, the witness statement is silent as regards the points made in [Paragon's] application."
"So the position is that even if Mr Hunt himself decides to play no further part in this matter, we're going to require some live evidence in any event. If Mr Hunt does participate in this, there's perhaps going to be a little more live evidence than would otherwise be the case and questions of waiver of privilege …. So the direction must be, I think, that what I need to do today is give directions that will ensure the opportunity for Mr Hunt to become engaged and look for a hearing date at which parties can attend to give evidence perhaps a little time in the future. That's my view of the landscape, Mr Trevelyan, do you have anything to say about that?"
"Your Honour, only that I agree with your Honour's proposed way forward. I could say that I did have some concerns reading [Annolight's] application and I hear, of course, what my learned friend for [Annolight] now says. But [Annolight's] application in turn would always have been for a trial on fundamental dishonesty and at which at least Mr Hunt, it seems to me, or possibly Mr Sarwar as well, would have been required to give oral evidence in any event. So I did have some concerns about whether this was a matter which could be conducted today anyway, but I hear what your Honour says of course."
"The hearing of the three applications is adjourned to the next available date in September 2020 before HHJ Godsmark QC when oral evidence will be heard. Time estimate 1 day."
"Walker Prestons have always been privy to all documents and information relating to my previous employment and have never given me reason to believe that there are were any discrepancies within any of it. Ian Meachan of Walker Prestons had drawn my attention, a signature that was on a document. He questioned its validity and told me that he thought that it was a forgery, because it didn't match my signature. The document was one that I had allegedly signed, which made me a director of the firm, National Glass. At the time the document had been signed, I had lost both my parents and sister to cancer, my marriage was breaking down and I was [faced] with the prospect that I would be possibly losing my home and residency of my child. I was suffering extreme stress and cannot recall signing any such document, and have never stated anything to the contrary. Never was this document or my signature on it, an issue to Walker Prestons with regards to how successful they thought my claim would be."
"A number of matters are particularly relevant. First, the Firm is no longer acting for Mr Hunt. Second, it appears to be the case that privilege has been waived and there is no restriction on the Firm giving a full account of the position between itself and Mr Hunt. Third, it is clear to me on even a brief perusal of the witness statements that there are radically different accounts given by Mr Sarwar (the Firm) and Mr Hunt as to the facts which are central to certain of the issues to be determined by the judge on the hearing of the defendants' applications. It may well be that it is rare to require the attendance of a representative to be cross-examined on an application of this type but in my judgment it is difficult to see how these issues could be resolved in a fair and proportionate way without oral evidence from Mr Sarwar. Fourth, I am confident that the nature of these issues is that they can be managed in accordance with the Overriding Objective, so as to avoid the hearing of the applications becoming a substantial piece of satellite litigation. That is one of the concerns which motivated Sir Thomas Bingham MR in his cautionary observations in the Ridehalgh case."
Legal framework
"(a) as a result of any improper, unreasonable or negligent act or omission on the part of any legal or other representative or any employee of such a representative; or
(b) which, in the light of any such act or omission occurring after they were incurred, the court considers it is unreasonable to expect that party to pay."
"must identify—
(a) what the legal representative is alleged to have done or failed to do; and
(b) the costs that the legal representative may be ordered to pay or which are sought against the legal representative."
"(1) Has the legal representative of whom complaint is made acted improperly, unreasonably or negligently? (2) If so, did such conduct cause the applicant to incur unnecessary costs? (3) If so, is it in all the circumstances just to order the legal representative to compensate the applicant for the whole or any part of the relevant costs?"
At 236-237, Sir Thomas Bingham MR addressed the implications of legal professional privilege in the context of a wasted costs application, saying:
"Where an applicant seeks a wasted costs order against the lawyers on the other side, legal professional privilege may be relevant both as between the applicant and his lawyers and as between the respondent lawyers and their client. In either case it is the client's privilege, which he alone can waive.
The first of these situations can cause little difficulty. If the applicant's privileged communications are germane to an issue in the application, to show what he would or would not have done had the other side not acted in the manner complained of, he can waive his privilege; if he declines to do so adverse inferences can be drawn.
The respondent lawyers are in a different position. The privilege is not theirs to waive. In the usual case where a waiver would not benefit their client they will be slow to advise the client to waive his privilege, and they may well feel bound to advise that the client should take independent advice before doing so. The client may be unwilling to do that, and may be unwilling to waive if he does. So the respondent lawyers may find themselves at a grave disadvantage in defending their conduct of proceedings, unable to reveal what advice and warnings they gave, what instructions they received. In some cases this potential source of injustice may be mitigated by reference to the taxing master, where different rules apply, but only in a small minority of cases can this procedure be appropriate. Judges who are invited to make or contemplate making a wasted costs order must make full allowance for the inability of respondent lawyers to tell the whole story. Where there is room for doubt, the respondent lawyers are entitled to the benefit of it. It is again only when, with all allowances made, a lawyer's conduct of proceedings is quite plainly unjustifiable that it can be appropriate to make a wasted costs order."
After stressing at 237 that "[d]emonstration of a causal link is essential", Sir Thomas Bingham MR turned at 238-239 to procedure, as to which he said:
"The procedure to be followed in determining applications for wasted costs must be laid down by courts so as to meet the requirements of the individual case before them. The overriding requirements are that any procedure must be fair and that it must be as simple and summary as fairness permits. Fairness requires that any respondent lawyer should be very clearly told what he is said to have done wrong and what is claimed. But the requirement of simplicity and summariness means that elaborate pleadings should in general be avoided. No formal process of discovery will be appropriate. We cannot imagine circumstances in which the applicant should be permitted to interrogate the respondent lawyer, or vice versa. Hearings should be measured in hours, and not in days or weeks. Judges must not reject a weapon which Parliament has intended to be used for the protection of those injured by the unjustifiable conduct of the other side's lawyers, but they must be astute to control what threatens to become a new and costly form of satellite litigation."
"Nobody had their eye on the ball. As a consequence [the employment judge] … adopted the wrong procedure. She allowed the Respondent's solicitors to submit comments upon the Appellant's representations to her. That is not an appropriate procedure to adopt when a wasted costs order is made. The Tribunal should give the representative a reasonable opportunity to make oral or written submissions as to why the order should not be made (rule 48(7)). But whilst the other party may apply for an order - although the issue can exceptionally be raised by the Tribunal at its own initiative - it does not thereafter comment on the submissions, and it will never be appropriate for the receiving party to cross examine the representative against whom the order is being considered."
"26. … As for cross-examination of the representative against whom costs are sought, no doubt in most circumstances this will be inappropriate and/or unnecessary and/or disproportionate. But in a case like the present, where the representative is no longer acting for the party, where privilege has already been waived, where an oral hearing has been fixed and where the party and the representative have given different accounts of facts which may be central to the issue before the tribunal, cross-examination would seem a fair and proportionate way of helping it to get to the right result.
27. [Counsel for the solicitors] was not able to suggest a principled basis for any such absolute rule. He did, however, refer me to a passage in the judgment of the court in Ridehalgh v Horsefield [1994] Ch 205, 238–239, which reads:
'Procedure The procedure to be followed in determining applications for wasted costs must be laid down by courts so as to meet the requirements of the individual case before them. The overriding requirements are that any procedure must be fair and that it must be as simple and summary as fairness permits. Fairness requires that any respondent lawyer should be very clearly told what he is said to have done wrong and what is claimed. But the requirement of simplicity and summariness means that elaborate pleadings should in general be avoided. No formal process of discovery will be appropriate. We cannot imagine circumstances in which the applicant should be permitted to interrogate the respondent lawyer, or vice versa. Hearings should be measured in hours, and not in days or weeks. Judges must not reject a weapon which Parliament has intended to be used for the protection of those injured by the unjustifiable conduct of the other side's lawyers, but they must be astute to control what threatens to become a new and costly form of satellite litigation.'
The specific points made in that passage do not assist. The Court of Appeal says nothing about the party seeking the order having no right to make submissions. Nor does it say anything about cross-examination: in context, the reference to 'interrogating' the representative is clearly to administering paper interrogatories. The real point being made is that the procedure should be as summary as is consistent with fairness; and in that context the court deprecates the deployment of elaborate procedures. It might on that basis have been open to one or more of the parties to submit to the judge that he should not hear oral evidence at all - from either the claimant or Mr Clegg - and simply have made a broad-brush assessment on the basis of their statements. I am not in fact sure that it would have been right for the judge to accede to such a submission in the circumstances of this case; but the real point is that it was not made, and that all parties proceeded on the basis that an oral hearing, with live evidence, was required. In those circumstances I can see nothing wrong in the evidence being tested in cross-examination."
"Where, at a hearing other than the trial, evidence is given in writing, any party may apply to the court for permission to cross-examine the person giving the evidence."
Where, therefore, a lawyer against whom a wasted costs order is sought has filed a witness statement, the Court must have power to direct cross-examination.
The present case
Conclusion
Lord Justice Arnold:
Lord Justice Warby: