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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Farrer & Co LLP v Meyer [2022] EWCA Civ 706 (26 May 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/706.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 706 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Mr Justice Kerr
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE NICOLA DAVIES
and
LORD JUSTICE MALES
____________________
FARRER & CO LLP |
Respondent/Claimant |
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- and - |
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JULIE MARIE MEYER |
Appellant/Claimant |
____________________
Liisa Lahti (instructed by Farrer & Co LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 19 May 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Males: #
Introduction
"The learned judge had no jurisdiction to find that the Appellant was in contempt of court, or to make a suspended committal order because the relevant provisions of CPR Part 71 and PD 71 were not complied with in respect of the 21 January hearing and the order made subsequently to it."
Background
(i) bank statements for any account held in the defendant's name at Banque Migros from the date that account was opened to the date of the order;
(ii) documents relating to the loan obtained by the defendant from Banque Migros, including but not limited to (a) the loan agreement; (b) bank statements and other documents showing the account or accounts into which the loan proceeds were paid; and (c) bank statements and other documents showing payment in respect of the loan and the accounts from which those payments had been made;
(iii) documents relating to or evidencing the status of her alleged director's account with Viva Investment Partners AG from the date of her first involvement with Viva Investment Partners AG (howsoever called) to the date of the order;
(iv) credit card statements in respect of any corporate card or credit card used by the defendant to fund her living and/or personal expenses from 2016 to the date of the order;
(v) any correspondence or documents relating to her notification to Companies House as a Person with Significant Control in respect of Lattun Limited;
(vi) her tax returns to the United States' Internal Revenue Service for each and every year from 2016 onwards;
(vii) the two sale and purchase agreements to which the defendant referred during the course of her adjourned examination and under which her entitlement to earnout consideration arises; and
(viii) any documents relating to the exercise of and sums held in her pension.
The judgment
"171. I am satisfied that this is an appropriate case to exercise that jurisdiction. The defendant has shown herself in these proceedings to be a selfish and untrustworthy person, her word counts for nothing if it suits her to break it, she showed indifference to the respect properly due to the court and to the financial and resource burdens to which she continues to subject the claimant and the court."
The appeal
The relevant provisions of CPR Part 71 and PD 71
An order to attend court must, unless the court otherwise orders, be served personally on the person ordered to attend court not less than 14 days before the hearing.
(1) If a person against whom an order has been made under rule 71.2—
(a) fails to attend court;
(b) refuses at the hearing to take the oath or to answer any question; or
(c) otherwise fails to comply with the order,
the court will refer the matter to a High Court judge or Circuit Judge.
(2) That judge may, provided the judgment creditor has complied with rules 71.4 and 71.5, hold the person in contempt of court and make an order punishing them by a fine, imprisonment, confiscation of assets or other punishment under the law.
(3) If such an order is made, the judge will direct that—
(a) the order shall be suspended, provided that the person—
(i) attends court at a time and place specified in the order; and
(ii) complies with all the terms of that order and the original order; and
(b) if the person fails to comply with any term on which the order is suspended, they shall be brought before a judge to consider whether the order should be discharged.
If a judge or court officer refers to a High Court judge or Circuit Judge the failure of a judgment debtor to comply with an order under rule 71.2, he shall certify in writing the respect in which the judgment debtor failed to comply with the order.
If the hearing is adjourned, the court will give directions as to the manner in which notice of the new hearing is to be served on the person ordered to attend court.
Ms Meyer's submissions
"11. Summarising the above, where a Part 71 hearing is adjourned, any orders re-listing the Part 71 hearing must be in accordance with r71.7 and, it is submitted, in form N79A, be served in accordance with r71.3 and an affidavit filed in accordance with r71.5. Where a person is considered to be in breach of a requirement under Part 71 and the matter is referred to a High Court Judge, they must certify in writing the respect in which the judgment debtor failed to comply with the order.
12. These procedures were not complied with in any respect in regard to the orders made subsequently to the Part 71 Order itself. In particular, neither the Williams J Order nor the Knowles J Order certified that the Appellant was in breach or made an order in form N39 or containing the same information contained in form N39. The Orders were not served personally on D and no orders were made for alternative service. C did not file affidavits in respect of the same. The Knowles J Order did not bear a penal notice putting C on notice that the hearing of her own applications on 21 January 2022 would be treated as an adjourned Part 71 hearing. Furthermore, the order of HHJ Simpkiss, leading to the hearing before Williams J and the order of Knowles J did not comply with the requirements of r71.2(6) and were not therefore orders made pursuant to r71.2. They did not specify attendance at a specified time and place. The Kerr J Order requiring the Appellant to attend on 14 February 2022 was not made in form N79A. It would only have been open for Kerr J to make a finding of contempt under r71.8 if it had been an order made under rule 71.2 that the Appellant had failed to comply with. Kerr J also needed to be satisfied that the requirements of r71.4 and 71.5 had been complied with. It is submitted that this required personal service on the Appellant, as no alternative method was authorised in those orders and further affidavits for service were also required. No such service or affidavits were produced. The retrospective dispensing with such service in the order of Kerr J of 17 February 2022 is a gross violation of the strict procedure required out of fairness for the Appellant in light of the serious consequences that she faces with her liberty being at stake.
13. Therefore, it is respectfully submitted that the finding of contempt in the Kerr J Order suspended sentence ought to be set aside for procedural non-compliance; …"
(1) orders other than the initial order requiring Ms Meyer to attend on 5th March 2020 needed to be personally served on her pursuant to CPR 71.3;
(2) there was no certificate of the respect(s) in which Ms Meyer had failed to comply with the order made under CPR 71.2, as required by paragraph 6 of PD 71;
(3) the orders made were not in the right form;
(4) there was no affidavit as required by CPR 71.5;
(5) the order made by Mr Justice Robin Knowles did not bear a penal notice;
(6) the order made by Judge Simpkiss was defective;
(7) the order with which Ms Meyer had failed to comply was not an order made under CPR 71.2; and
(8) the order made by Mr Justice Kerr at the hearing on 14th January 2022 dispensing retrospectively with personal service of the order appealed from was defective.
"Ground 4: Contempt
23. Ground 4 appears to be a new and technical point, to the effect that an order relisting the Part 71 hearing had to be in a particular form and that there had to be an affidavit filed according to rule 71.5. Criticisms are made of the form of the orders made.
24. There is nothing in any of these points. First, they were not points made to the judge, and therefore they cannot arise on appeal. Secondly, they are in any event wrong. I consider that all the procedural requirements in Part 71 relevant to this contempt hearing and order were complied with. Thirdly, if they were not, any technical non-compliance was waived when no such objections were taken at the hearing before Kerr J.
25. Accordingly, for these reasons, I consider that there is nothing in Ground 4. It has no prospect of success."
Analysis
No new points on appeal
Merits
Service
Certificate
Forms
Affidavit
Penal notice
The order made by Judge Simpkiss
An order under CPR 71.2
Dispensing with personal service retrospectively
Dispensing with strict compliance
Sentence
"37. In deciding what sentence to impose for a contempt of court, the judge has to weigh and assess a number of factors. This court is reluctant to interfere with decisions of that nature, and will generally only do so if the judge: (i) made an error of principle; (ii) took into account immaterial factors or failed to take into account material factors; or (iii) reached a decision which was plainly wrong in that it was outside the range of decisions reasonably open to the judge. …
38. It follows from that approach that there will be few cases in which a contemnor will be able successfully to challenge a sentence as being excessive …"
Disposal
Postscript – embargo
Lady Justice Nicola Davies
Lord Justice Green