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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Nambiar v Solitair Ltd [2022] EWCA Civ 1135 (09 August 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1135.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 1135, [2022] WLR(D) 350 |
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ON APPEAL FROM MANCHESTER CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
HHJ STEPHEN DAVIES
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL
and
LADY JUSTICE CARR
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ANISH NAMBIAR |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SOLITAIR LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 20 July 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment will be handed down remotely by circulation to the parties or their representatives on 9 August by email and released to the National Archives. A copy of the judgment in final form as handed down should be available shortly thereafter but can otherwise be obtained on request by email to the judicial Office ([email protected]).
Lady Justice Simler:
Introduction
The background
"132. Without anticipating the outcome of the further hearing which will have to be held to deal with sentence, I have already considered the relevant principles so far as sentencing for contempt of court are concerned which have recently been set out in helpful detail in the judgment of Snowden J in the Minstrel Recruitment case referred to above, at [238] to [246]. However, it may be of some benefit to Mr Nambiar if I indicate that on the basis of the evidence I have heard and the findings I have made thus far and, thus, without taking into account any matters which may mitigate the apparent seriousness of the breach, my provisional conclusion is that the breach is so serious as to pass the custodial threshold and that a short custodial sentence of 2 months, which may properly be suspended for 12 months, would be justified."
"sought unsuccessfully to appeal the order dated the 27 January 2021 both in respect of the application and the claim. Permission to appeal was refused on the papers by Lord Justice Males on 8 March 2021".
The underlying documents were not provided and the chronology made no reference to these earlier unsuccessful applications for permission to appeal, whether to the relevant dates, the gist of what occurred, or anything at all about the unsuccessful applications. Nor was the court provided with copies of the orders made by Males LJ. The court made its own enquiries and obtained copies of the orders and the underlying materials.
i) The judge erred in finding that the injunction was enforceable for a breach alleged to have occurred on 19 December 2019 in the circumstances where, having only been sealed by the court on 21 January 2020, the injunction was not personally served upon the appellant until a date after the alleged breach on 5 February 2020. It was not therefore operative or enforceable at the time of the alleged breach on 19 December 2019.
ii) Alternatively, the judge erred in finding that the appellant had breached the injunction by causing the email to be sent by Mailchimp on behalf of the Second Defendant. Reliance was placed on four reasons, including (amongst other things) the asserted failure by the judge to apply the criminal standard of proof to the finding of contempt; the absence of evidence to support the judge's findings; and his reliance on inferences wrongly drawn.
iii) Further and in the alternative, the proceedings below were unjust, resulting in serious procedural errors and irregularities in the context of a committal application. Reliance was placed on four errors or irregularities including the matters referred to in grounds 1 and 2, and the fact that the substantive issues in the claim were dealt with at the same time as the contempt allegations, which was unfair and effectively deprived him as an alleged contemnor of his right to silence.
"1. It is apparent that it was not suggested below that the injunction was unenforceable or inoperative as of 19 December 2019. If that point had been taken, the judge would have been able to dispense with personal service and would undoubtedly have done so, as the applicant was aware of the relevant provisions of the order. In these circumstances it is not appropriate to allow this point to be raised for the first time on appeal.
2. It is clear that the judge applied the criminal standard of proof to the contempt allegation. Not only did he say so, but the text of his judgment (including his references to the existence or otherwise of a reasonable doubt) makes clear that he applied this standard. His judgment involves no reversal of the burden of proof. He was entitled to draw the inferences which he did. The evidence that the applicant was responsible for the sending of the email, taken as a whole, was very strong.
3. There was no injustice in the proceedings below. Much of this ground represents repetition of points already raised in the previous grounds, but to the extent that it adds anything, it is without substance. In particular the applicant had the benefit of legal representation by counsel and was aware of his right to silence."
"i) On what basis the appeal is not abusive of the process because it appears to be an attack on the final decision of Males LJ dated 8 March 2021 refusing permission to appeal against the order of 27 January 2021, including in particular, paragraph 9 of that order;
ii) on what basis the appeal against the findings in the judgment of 13 January 2021 and the order of 27 January 2021 can proceed in these circumstances."
Appeals as of right against committal orders
"Subject to the provisions of this section, an appeal shall lie under this section from any order or decision of a court in the exercise of jurisdiction to punish for contempt of court (including criminal contempt) …".
"An appellant or respondent requires permission to appeal –
a) where the appeal is from a decision of a judge in the County Court or the High Court, or …, except where the appeal is against –
i) a committal order;
ii) a refusal to grant habeas corpus; or
iii) a secure accommodation order made under section 25 of the Children Act 1989 or …"
"57. Although a suspended committal order does not immediately deprive the contemnor of his liberty …, it hangs a sword of Damocles over his head which puts his liberty at much greater risk than did the order which he has been found to have breached. To the extent that there is any doubt about the meaning of the rules, it should be resolved in favour of the citizen whose liberty is thus put in jeopardy. In our judgment, therefore, a suspended committal order is a committal order for the purpose of CPR52.3(1)(a) and may be appealed without permission."
"13. The meaning of "committal order" in CPR52.3(1)(a) was at the heart of Government of Sierra Leone v Davenport [2002] EWCA Civ 230. The appellant Government had been the applicant in committal proceedings in the Chancery Division where the judge had made no order on the application save as to costs. The Government maintained that it did not need permission to appeal. Jonathan Parker LJ accepted a submission on behalf of the respondent that the appeal regime set out in section 13 of the Administration of Justice Act 1960 had been radically changed by the introduction of the CPR pursuant to section 54 of the Access to Justice Act 1999. He said (at paragraph 8):
"The natural meaning of the expression 'committal order' is an order which commits a party to prison. That that is its true meaning in the context of CPR52.3(1)(a) is in my judgment confirmed when one looks at the other two exceptions to the requirement of permission to appeal, namely a refusal to grant habeas corpus and a secure accommodation order, both such orders being ones which affect personal liberty. [This] order is manifestly not a committal order in that sense of the expression. On the contrary, it expressly records that no order is made on the claimant's application. Nor can I see any basis for saying that s13 of the 1960 Act somehow limits the effect of s54 of the 1999 Act on the operation of r52.3 of the Civil Procedure Rules. It follows, in my judgment, that permission to appeal is required."
Laws LJ expressed his "entire agreement". He also expressed the provisional view (at paragraph 34) that, even where a contemnor has been committed to prison, only he and not the applicant has an appeal as of right.
"14. Tanfern and Government of Sierra Leone were considered by this Court in Barnet London Borough Council v Hurst [2002] EWCA Civ 1009, where Brooke LJ (with whom Dyson and Simon Brown LJJ agreed) said (at paragraph 26):
"It is therefore clear that for the purposes of the CPR appellate regime a distinction has to be drawn between an order by which a party is committed to prison (for which permission to appeal is not required) and any other order or decision made by a court in the exercise of jurisdiction to punish for contempt. Such orders come within the ambit of section 13 of the 1960 Act. Whether they consist of 'no order save as to costs', as in the Davenport case, or an order for the adjournment of the whole or part of the application, as in the present case."
Brooke LJ later acknowledged (at paragraph 31) that "it is not possible to legislate in advance of every type of situation" but hoped that "the general principles will now be clear"."
"21. In my judgment, the earlier authorities all point in a consistent direction. They demonstrate that the purpose behind the wording of CPR52.3(1)(a)(i) was related to personal liberty. That is apparent not only from the Bowman Report but also from the drafting which specifies three exceptions to the requirement for permission, the singular theme of which is interference with, or deprivation of, liberty. I appreciate that a financial penalty may impact harshly on a contemnor but the considerations which underlie the impact of a deprivation of liberty are absent. Apart from S-C, the post-CPR authorities all point away from an expansive construction of "committal order". Notwithstanding Mr Brindle's attempts to circumnavigate them, I consider that they are fatal to his case".
Abuse of process and estoppel
"[abuse of process] concerns the inherent power which any court of justice must possess to prevent misuse of its procedure in a way which, although not inconsistent with the literal application of its procedural rules, would nevertheless be manifestly unfair to a party to litigation before it, or would otherwise bring the administration of justice into disrepute among right-thinking people. The circumstances in which abuse of process can arise are very varied … It would, in my view, be most unwise if this House were to use this occasion to say anything that might be taken as limiting to fixed categories the kinds of circumstances in which the court has a duty (I disavow the word discretion) to exercise this salutary power".
"24. The court's power to strike a claim out is discretionary, but it does not seem to me that on an application to strike out a claim based on the proposition that the proceedings are an abuse of the process of the court, on the principle of Johnson v Gore Wood, the case is likely to turn on the exercise of a discretion, at any rate if the court decides in favour of the application. Either the proceedings are an abuse of the process, or they are not. It could not be right to strike the case out (on this ground) unless the court is satisfied that the claim is an abuse of the process, and if the court were so satisfied, it would be only in very unusual circumstances that it would not strike the claim out. In Hunter v Chief Constable of the West Midlands Police [1982] AC 529 at 536 Lord Diplock spoke of the court's inherent power to prevent misuse of its procedure and of the court's duty (I disavow the word discretion) to exercise this salutary power'.
I note that Longmore LJ has expressed the same view, agreeing with Thomas LJ, in Aldi Stores Ltd v WSP Group plc and others [2007] EWCA Civ 1260 at paragraph 38."
The position is even clearer where, as here, the proceedings involve a direct challenge to a final decision disposing of an identical appeal.
" …We cannot think that Lord Diplock would have regarded Mr Smith as lacking a full opportunity of contesting the Crown Court decision against him when he had had the benefit of a solicitor and counsel throughout the proceedings, had pleaded not guilty, had attended every day of the trial, had been able to give instructions to counsel on the cross-examination of prosecution witnesses, had given evidence himself, had called witnesses, had sought to establish an alibi, had had the benefit of submissions made to the jury on his behalf, had pursued an application for leave to appeal against his conviction, had settled grounds of appeal drawing attention to some at least of his complaints about the manner in which his case had been conducted by his solicitor and had renewed his application for leave to appeal to the full court on the initial refusal of leave. Even if it be true that valid criticism can be made of the conduct of his defence, it seems to us quite impossible to hold that Mr. Smith lacked a full opportunity to contest the charge. Were this the correct meaning of the rule, then the rule itself would be virtually meaningless, since it is hard to imagine a case in which a convicted defendant could not find some plausible ground upon which to criticise the preparation of the defence by his solicitor. We fully appreciate the great difficulty which faces any convicted defendant seeking to challenge his conviction on appeal on the grounds that his defence had been negligently conducted; this does not, however, lead to the conclusion that such a defendant lacked a full opportunity to contest the charge against him".
Conclusion
Popplewell LJ:
Carr LJ: