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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> EUI Ltd v UK Vodaphone Ltd [2021] EWCA Civ 1771 (24 November 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/1771.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Civ 1771 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
HH Judge Sephton QC sitting as a deputy High Court judge
G90MA339
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS
and
MR JUSTICE FRANCIS
____________________
EUI LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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UK VODAPHONE LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
The Respondent was not present nor represented at the hearing of the appeal
Hearing date : 24 November 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE BAKER :
"if through no fault of his own a person gets mixed up in the tortious acts of others so as to facilitate their wrong-doing he may incur no personal liability but he comes under a duty to assist the person who has been wronged by giving him full information and disclosing the identity of the wrongdoers. I do not think that it matters whether he became so mixed up by voluntary action on his part or because it was his duty to do what he did. It may be that if this causes him expense the person seeking the information ought to reimburse him. But justice requires that he should co-operate in righting the wrong if he unwittingly facilitated its perpetration."
"The three conditions to be satisfied for the court to exercise the power to order Norwich Pharmacal relief are:
i) a wrong must have been carried out, or arguably carried out, by an ultimate wrongdoer;
ii) there must be the need for an order to enable action to be brought against the ultimate wrongdoer; and
iii) the person against whom the order is sought must: (a) be mixed up in so as to have facilitated the wrongdoing; and (b) be able or likely to be able to provide the information necessary to enable the ultimate wrongdoer to be sued."
"But that does not mean, as the appellants contend, that discovery will be ordered against anyone who can give information as to the identity of a wrongdoer. There is absolutely no authority for that. A person injured in a road accident might know that a bystander had taken the number of the car which ran him down and have no other means of tracing the driver. Or a person might know that a particular person is in possession of a libellous letter which he has good reason to believe defames him but the author of which he cannot discover. I am satis?ed that it would not be proper in either case to order discovery in order that the person who has suffered damage might be able to ?nd and sue the wrongdoer. Neither authority, principle nor public policy would justify that."
"It is true that the traditional formulation of the test is in such terms, but that is because those are the usual circumstances in which someone becomes something beyond a mere witness. On the facts of the cases where orders were made, the respondent was usually in that position. In my view the answer to the question lies in recognising that what the cases are doing is contrasting two things – the mere witness on the one hand, and the person who is not a mere witness on the other. On the cases the latter class is generally described in terms of participation/facilitation, as though that were the opposite of being a mere witness. But the real analysis lies in appreciating that the courts are holding not that those factors are indeed the other side of a dichotomy, but that those factors prevent the respondent from being a mere witness. Once that is recognised then it becomes relevant to consider whether there are other facts, short of participation/facilitation, which could prevent a person from being a mere witness."
The question (paragraph 54) was therefore whether the defendant
"is a mere witness (or metaphorical bystander) or whether its engagement with the wrong is such as to make it more than a mere witness and therefore susceptible to the court's jurisdiction to order Norwich Pharmacal disclosure."
"From the moment when they enter the port until the time when the consignee obtains clearance and removes the goods, they are under the control of the Customs in the sense that the Customs authorities can prevent their movement or specify the places where they are to be put, and in the event of their having any suspicions they have full powers to examine or test the goods. When they are satis?ed and the appropriate duty has been paid the consignee or his agent is authorised to remove the goods. No doubt the respondents are never in possession of the goods, but they do have considerable control of them during the period from entry into the port until removal by the consignee. And the goods cannot get into the hands of the consignee until the respondents have taken a number of steps and have released them."
Similarly in Various Claimants v News Group Newspapers Ltd (No.2), in which the claimants were seeking to bring proceedings against the proprietor of a national newspaper for phone hacking, an order was made against the Metropolitan Police for disclosure of information relating to the hacking which they had acquired in the course of an investigation.
"Fraud – We will not pay a claim which is in any part fraudulent, false, exaggerated or if you or anyone acting for you makes a claim in a fraudulent or false way; or where we have been given a false statement; or any documents which are false or stolen. Your policy and all other policies to which you are connected through EUI Limited will be cancelled or voided. We will seek to recover any costs that have been incurred and will not return any premium."
"where, as in our case, someone asserts that they lived at address B so as to facilitate a fraudulent insurance claim that proceeds on the footing that they have now vacated address A, the ability to use a telephone that is not fixed facilitates that process. So it is wrongdoing and elevates Vodaphone from being a mere witness to being a party that is capable, legitimately, of being targeted in this jurisdiction, something which Vodaphone appear not to contest."
"9. I find that an ingenious argument but I am afraid I am not persuaded by it. The difficulty with it is that the provision of "mobile telephony" is not something that is exclusive to UK Vodaphone Limited or indeed to telephone providers generally. It is a joint effort between providers of telephone equipment and the people who provide the infrastructure for that equipment. The same argument as Mr Higgins uses could be applied to any ISP on the internet because using the internet it is quite possible to purport to be making a request for a delivery, for example, at one place where in fact you are at a different place. We are talking here about a means of communication and to suggest that somebody who provides the means of communication is so wrapped up in the matter as to have gone beyond the role of mere witness, in my judgment, is to strain language.
10. For that reason I am not persuaded that this is an application which can succeed.
11. I emphasise that my concern is the greater because one is dealing here with [the policy holder's mother's] Article 8 rights and, although there is a strong argument to be had that her Article 8 rights should not be suborned to the claimant's rights to avoid fraud, this is a case in which the bootstraps, as it were, have to be used. The claimant says that it can only prove fraud if they have the telephone details and yet the telephone details may prove to be entirely benign. However, they may contain, as I discussed in argument earlier on, matters which are private to [the policy holder's mother] which may be embarrassing to her.
12. I do not decide the case on the basis of a refusal to exercise my discretion under Article 8. The basis for my decision is that I do not have jurisdiction on the basis that Vodaphone in this case, in my judgment, are mere witnesses and they cannot be distinguished in the way that is suggested by Mann J in the News Group case."
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS
MR JUSTICE FRANCIS