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Cite as: [2001] EWHC Admin 394

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Clegg v. The Secretary of State for Trade and Industry; Christopher Konstantine Barrington Mayhew and Anthony Harry Seton Robertshaw [2001] EWHC Admin 394 (11th April, 2001)

Case No: CO/3809/2000

Neutral Citation Number: [2001] EWHC Admin 394

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE

QUEENS BENCH DIVISION

ADMINISTRATIVE COURT

Wednesday 11th April 2001

B e f o r e:

THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON

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John Michael Clegg

Claimant


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The Secretary of State for Trade and Industry

First Defendant


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Christopher Konstantine Barrington Mayhew

Second Defendant


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Anthony Harry Seton Robertshaw

Third Defendant

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(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of

Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street

London EC4A 2AG

Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838

Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)

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Matthew Collings (instructed by Peters & Peters for the Claimant)

Robert Hildyard QC (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor for the Defendants)

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Judgment

As Approved by the Court

Crown Copyright ©

MR JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON:

Introduction

1. From 23 Oct 1984 until 31 January 1992 the Claimant, John Michael Clegg ("Mr Clegg"), a solicitor, was the managing director of Wace Group plc ("Wace"). Wace was a listed public company until 1999. In 1990, Wace made an agreed takeover offer for the shares of Parkway Group plc ("Parkway"), also a listed public company, at a price substantially greater than the price at which Parkway's shares were then trading. Parkway's name was changed to Wace UK Holdings Ltd. After the takeover, Wace was concerned about share dealings in Parkway in the period before the offer was made public. Its concerns led to the resignation of Mr Clegg. Wace approached the Department for Trade and Industry. On 26 January 1992 a "sensational" newspaper article was published about share dealings in Parkway. On 21 February 1992, the Secretary of State appointed the Second Defendant (a civil servant) and the Third Defendant (a Director and a Deputy Inspector of Companies in the Investigations and Enforcement Directorate of the Department of Trade and Industry), to whom I shall refer as "the Inspectors", under section 442 of the Companies Act 1985:

as inspectors to investigate the membership of [Parkway] and otherwise with respect to the company for the purpose of determining the true persons who are or have been financially interested in the success or failure (real or apparent) of the company or able to control or materially to influence its policy, and to report thereon in such manner as the Secretary of State may direct.

2. On 9 March 1992 the Inspectors were similarly appointed to investigate the ownership of shares in European Colour plc and Tinsley Robor plc.

3. On 21 February 1992 the Inspectors were also appointed under section 177 of the Financial Services Act 1986 in respect of Parkway. This enquiry was subsumed in the section 442 enquiry.

4. The Inspectors completed their enquiries in April 1998. They produced a single, combined, report ("the Report") that was signed off by them on 21 June 2000. According to the first witness statement of Mr Hanna, a civil servant in the Department of Trade and Industry, on 13 July 2000 ministers decided that the report should be published. It was published on 31 August 2000. There was a print run of 200, and at 21 December 2000 there were about 23 ´ of the report unsold.

5. The Inspectors' report ("the Report") is highly critical of Mr Clegg. Paragraph 11.2 is as follows:

As many previous Companies Act inspectors have discovered, where an individual intent on misleading a company's board of directors and its advisers gains control of a company, there is sometimes very little that can be done to prevent the abuse of that power for personal gain. Mr J M Clegg, as managing director of Wace throughout the relevant period covered by our report, was no exception. Most notably we believe he benefited from substantial secret dealings in the shares of Wace, European Colour, Tinsley Robor and Parkway through bank accounts in his name with Credit Suisse and in the name of William Clegg (the name which he had been given at birth) with Anglo Irish Bank.

6. These proceedings were commenced on 13 October 2000. Sections 6 and 7 of the claim form are as follows:

Section 6.
The Claimant requests permission to proceed with claim for judicial review of the following decisions or acts:
(i) the completion, and submission to the First Defendant, of a report dated 21st June 2000 by the Second and Third Defendants in respect of investigations under Section 442 of the Companies Act 1985 concerning Wace UK Holdings Limited, European Colour Plc and Tinsley Robor Plc:
(ii) the publication of that report by the First Defendant on 31st August 2000; and
(iii) the completion, submission and publication of any report in respect of an investigation under Section 177 of the Financial Services Act 1986 concerning Wace UK Holdings Limited.
Section 7
The remedies which are claimed are:
(a) in respect of (i) and (ii) above, quashing orders and a prohibiting order preventing further publication, dissemination or sale of the report:
(b) in respect of (iii) above, a prohibiting order, and
(c) in respect of (i), (ii) and (iii) above, declaratory relief as to the unlawfulness of the same.
Insofar as necessary, an interim remedy in respect of (b) is also sought, restraining the acts referred to in (iii) above.

7. On 30 November 2000, Forbes J gave Mr Clegg permission to apply for judicial review as to the matters set out in paragraphs 6(ii) and (iii) of the Claim Form, and ordered that the claim for permission with regard to paragraph 6(i) be renewed to the judge trying the substantive applications under paragraphs 6(ii) and (iii).

8. I heard the substantive applications in respect of paragraphs 6(ii) and (iii) of the Claim Form together with the application for leave to apply in respect of paragraph 6(i) on 10 and 11 April 2001. In the event, I decided to hear all of the parties' submissions on all of the claims in the Claim Form in order to decide whether to grant leave in respect of paragraph 6(i) and if so whether to grant relief. In this connection, the Defendants submitted that Mr Clegg required an extension of time to apply for relief in relation to the matters set out in that paragraph; that no grounds for an extension of time were in evidence; and that Mr Clegg had not brought these proceedings promptly and was therefore not entitled to such an extension. Mr Collings, for Mr Clegg, submitted that an extension of time should be granted.

The facts relevant to the application for judicial review

9. In June 1991, Mr Clegg went to live in the USA. Mr Clegg attended for an informal interview with the Inspectors on 10 March 1992. On 27 March 1992 he was examined on oath. Norton Rose acted on his behalf, and one of their solicitors accompanied him at his interview. Following the second interview, on 21 May 1992 Norton Rose sent a long letter to the Inspectors in the course of which they stated:

Mr Clegg accepts that what he said about his connections with the account in the name of William Clegg during his interview with the Inspectors was wrong and he is concerned therefore now to correct the record as soon as possible and give a full explanation to the Inspectors in person.

The account in the name of William Clegg was with Anglo Irish Bank, and was associated with dealings in shares relevant to the Inspectors' enquiry.

10. By letter dated 11 June 1992, Norton Rose informed the Inspectors that Mr Clegg had withdrawn his instructions. On 23 June 1992, Mr Clegg himself wrote to the Inspectors, enclosing amendments to the transcript of his formal interview and 13 pages of comment on matters referred to in his interview, and stating that he would contact the Inspectors "shortly in relation to a further interview". By 28 July 1992, no date for a further interview had been suggested by Mr Clegg, and by letter of that date the Inspectors formally required him, pursuant to section 434(1)(b) of the Companies Act 1985, to attend before them on 21 August 1992 to give evidence as to the matters set out in an enclosed schedule. Paragraphs 1 to 4 of that schedule concerned the takeover of Parkway, the bank account in the name of William Clegg that had been referred to in the letter and dealings in shares in Wace in the names of persons who, it was thought, might have been nominees for Mr Clegg. In his letter dated 8 August 1992, Mr Clegg, while professing continued co-operation, refused to attend on that date for reasons he set out, and stated:

I am currently preparing detailed replies to the Schedule enclosed with your letter of July 28th, which I will send you within the next few days and which I trust will be of assistance to you in the meantime.

The "meantime" referred to the time until his next interview.

11. On 11 August 1992 Mr Clegg sent to the Inspectors information on the matters referred to in the schedule. In relation to paragraphs 1 to 4 of the schedule, his document began with the statement:

These matters were extensively covered in the two interviews to date and in the various correspondence and other written information provided. If there are any specific issues to clarify or answer, I would be pleased to deal with them.

I take this to be an offer to provide information and comments in writing.

12. A meeting with Mr Clegg was arranged for 21 August 1992. However, on 20 August he sent a fax informing the Inspectors that he would be unable to attend "owing to a number of commitments in the U.S." that he did not specify. He added:

However, you should have received my letters of 8th and 11th August, the latter providing answers to the questions you wished to ask at tomorrow's interview.

This indicated that Mr Clegg considered that the further interview was unnecessary.

13. On 27 August 1992, the Inspectors sent to Mr Clegg a list of questions they required him to answer. On 5 September Mr Clegg replied with his answers. On 9 September 1992, the Inspectors sent further questions and certain comments on the information he had provided, and stated that he had failed to attend for interview despite having been required to do so. The correspondence continued with complaints by Mr Clegg as to the manner in which his evidence was being treated, but with no agreement to attend to be interviewed again on oath. The Inspectors concluded that he would not return to England to give evidence and set about preparing their report.

14. On 25 May 1995 the Inspectors sent to Mr Clegg a 10-page schedule of provisional criticisms. Their Secretary's letter stated:

I would stress that the Inspectors' views are only provisional and, even at this late stage, any evidence which you wish to give to the Inspectors will be carefully considered by them. The Inspectors have asked me to indicate that they do not think that it has been in your best interests to fail to attend before them to give evidence.
Should you wish to produce any evidence or comment on any item in the schedule please do so within 21 days of the date of this letter.

15. On 12 July 1995, new solicitors instructed by him, Peters & Peters, sent a holding response to this letter. The Inspectors agreed to extend Mr Clegg's time to respond to the provisional criticisms. On 11 August Peters & Peters sent a long letter to the Inspectors requesting what would appear to be all of the material on the basis of which they had arrived at their provisional criticisms of their client, including transcripts of witnesses. The Inspectors responded on 16 August 1995. Relying on Re Pergamon Press [1971] 1 Ch 388, they refused to comply with Peters & Peters' request, stating:

Your client has received a detailed schedule of matters possibly critical of him. Those points on which your client was unsure have been amplified to him in a telephone conversation.

Parenthetically, in their letter of 16 August 1995 Mr Clegg's solicitors took issue with the second sentence. The letter continued:

Even at this late stage the Inspectors are prepared to offer your client the opportunity to give evidence before them as he has been required to do. ... The Inspectors have indicated that they would be prepared to treat the provisional criticisms as an agenda.

The letter included a formal requirement that Mr Clegg attend for interview.

16. Mr Clegg did agree to attend for interview again. His solicitors' letter to the Inspectors of 4 September 1995 stated:

We wish to make it clear, for the avoidance of doubt, that the purpose of the interview is not simply that our client should be required to answer the provisional criticism on oath. ...

17. In their letter of 11 September 1995 the Inspectors agreed to make available to Peters & Peters copies of documents which Mr Clegg would or might have seen at the times relevant to their enquiry. They also stated:

As you rightly point out, and the Inspectors accept, your client is attending to give evidence not answer the provisional criticisms. Depending on his answers to questions it may be necessary to put to him a variety of documents. ...
...
Clearly the provisional criticisms may well have to be amended in the light of your client's evidence. Although the suggestion to treat the earlier provisional criticisms as an agenda was no more than an expectation that your client might give evidence covering those areas, it may assist to have a formal agenda for the interview. Such an agenda is also attached to this letter. The main areas which the Inspectors will wish to cover are clearly identified in the provisional criticisms previously forwarded to your client.

18. In their letter of 15 September 1995, Mr Clegg's solicitors stated:

We note that the main areas which the inspectors will wish to cover are those identified in the provisional criticisms, and that you accept that such provisional criticisms may well have to be amended in the light of the interview. We repeat the reservation of our client's rights in the penultimate paragraph of our letter dated 4th September.

19. The reservation of rights referred to Peters & Peters' request for access to the material on the basis of which the Inspectors had arrived at their provisional criticisms.

20. Mr Clegg attended for interview on 5 and 6 October 1995. He was subsequently sent transcripts for identification of transcription errors. On 21 November 1995, the Secretary to the Inspectors wrote to Mr Clegg's solicitors as follows:

I recall that at the telephone conversation on Monday 13 November 1995 Miss Warren (of Peters & Peters) mentioned that Mr J M Clegg will be submitting further substantive comments following his interview. I would be grateful if you would inform me when this submission may be expected.

21. Peters & Peters replied on 4 December:

We anticipate being in a position to provide you with our comments in relation to the interviews of 5 and 6 October, by Friday, 8 December 1995.

22. However, Peters & Peters changed their mind. On 13 December 1995 they wrote again to the Inspectors, complaining that their client had not had access to the underlying material relied upon by the Inspectors, reiterating their request for that material in the event of the Inspectors deciding to make any provisional criticisms of Mr Clegg, and stating:

But if the Inspectors still propose to criticise our client in their Report, we await amended provisional criticisms.

23. There followed correspondence between the Inspectors and Peters & Peters in which the Inspectors tried unsuccessfully to obtain from Mr Clegg an authority that would be accepted by the Enge, Switzerland, branch of Credit Suisse as authority to give them information concerning an account which they suspected, and he denied, was his. Regrettably, no response was sent to the sentence from the letter of 13 December 1995 quoted in the previous paragraph. An appropriate response, insisting on immediate submission of any further comments on the provisional criticisms, was called for and should have avoided these proceedings.

24. There appears to have been no communication between the Inspectors and Mr Clegg or Peters & Peters between May 1996 and July 2000. By letter dated 27 July 2000 the Department of Trade and Industry asked Peters & Peters whether they still represented Mr Clegg, and if not for his address. On 7 August Peters & Peters replied that the fee earner dealing with the matter had left, that they were arranging to recover their files, and asked for the purpose of the enquiry. By letter dated 9 August they were informed that the Inspectors had reported and "we wish to get in touch with them with a view to making arrangements as regards access to the report prior to publication".

25. The report was published on 30 August 2000. Peters & Peters and Mr Clegg were unaware of this at the time. In their letter of 22 August 2000, Peters & Peters stated that they would endeavour to contact Mr Clegg. Mr Clegg learnt of the Report on 25 August. Curiously, Peters & Peters again wrote on 6 September, stating that they hoped to respond to the letter of 9 August within 7 days. Two days later, on 8 September, they replied substantively. They referred to their letter of 11 August 1995 and the interviews in October 1995 and stated:

Thereafter we were expecting you

(i) to revise (or confirm) the Inspectors' provisional views,

(ii) to address our letter of 11th August and provide the materials, and

(iii) to receive our client's response to the provisional views.

Instead, it now appears that the Inspectors have reported.

They asked for a pre-publication copy of the report.

26. Over the following days a number of press articles appeared based on the Inspectors' report, as a result of which Peters & Peters and Mr Clegg learnt of its publication. In their letter to the Department of Trade and Industry of 15 September 2000, Peters & Peters asked a number of questions, including the reasons for the completion of the report without addressing the matters referred to in their letter of 8 September and the reasons for the publication of the report. They asked for confirmation whether the Department would halt distribution of the report. They stated:

A report highly critical of our client, which we are instructed contains many demonstrable inaccuracies, has been produced, published and publicised in a manner completely at variance with the usual and established procedures, and is totally in breach of natural justice.

27. On 22 September 2000, that letter was answered by Mr Hanna of the Department of Trade and Industry. He stated that he had no reason to believe, and that Peters & Peters' letter gave no him no reason to believe, that the provisional criticism process had not been fully carried out, or that a decision was taken by the Inspectors to report without addressing the necessary matters. He stated that Peters & Peters had not explained their allegations and:

Nor, incidentally, have you provided any details of the "many demonstrable inaccuracies" that you allege, although ... the content of the report was a matter for the inspectors, and not the Department.

28. As mentioned above, these proceedings were commenced on 13 October 2000. Subsequently, the Department of Trade and Industry stated that there will be no criminal proceedings or proceedings under the Companies Directors Disqualification Act 1986 against Mr Clegg in relation to the matters referred to in the Report.

The basis of the claim for judicial review

29. Mr Clegg contends that in conducting their investigations and making their report the Inspectors acted unfairly in relation to him, and failed to comply with the principles laid down by the Court of Appeal in Re Pergamon Press Ltd and Maxwell v Department of Trade and Industry [1974] 1 QB 523. The alleged unfairness arose as a result of the correspondence in 1995 to which I referred in paragraphs [20] to [22] above. In essence, it is claimed that Mr Clegg was deprived by the Inspectors of the opportunity of addressing and commenting on, and presenting further information and evidence, in response to the amended provisional criticisms envisaged in Peters & Peters' letter of 13 December 1995. Mr Collings put it this way in his skeleton argument:

The Inspectors published the report on 21st June 2000 without giving the Claimant any, or any adequate, opportunity to answer the criticisms against him.

30. In his first witness statement, Mr Clegg said:

But much of the report is simply wrong and can easily be proved to be.

He complained of the possibility of criminal proceedings based on the report, the possibility of directors' disqualification proceedings, and the "appalling publicity" given to the criticisms of him in the report.

The relief sought

31. Section 6(iii) and Section 7(b) of Mr Clegg' Claim Form relate to the envisaged report under section 177 of the Financial Services Act. There is to be no such separate report. It is therefore unnecessary to discuss this aspect of the case further.

32. In paragraph (a) of section 7 of his claim form, Mr Clegg sought a prohibiting order in respect of the publication, dissemination or sale of the report. Given that nearly all of the copies of the report have already been distributed, there would be little point in making such an order, and it was not pursued by Mr Collings.

33. In any event, the decision to publish the report was made by Ministers, not by the Inspectors, and there is no evidence that that decision was made with knowledge of the unfairness alleged by Mr Clegg. Although there are contacts between the Inspectors and the Department of Trade and Industry during an enquiry, the Report and the opinions set out in it are the Inspectors', not the Department's or any Minister's. Contrary to Mr Collings' submission, there is no evidence from which the Court can, or should, draw the inference that the minister or ministers responsible or their civil servants knew of the alleged unfairness when the decision to publish was made. Furthermore, I see no basis on which the minister is required to consult the persons referred to in a report before deciding whether or not to publish it. In this case, as is the practice, contact was made before publication not to ascertain whether there were objections to publication, but as a matter of courtesy to enable Mr Clegg to prepare himself for publication, with its likely attendant publicity. No grounds have been established to impugn the decision to publish the report. It follows that Mr Clegg could not be entitled to an order quashing that decision.

34. The remainder of the relief sought by Mr Clegg relates to the completion and submission of the Report. As mentioned above, I heard the application for permission to apply for such relief together with the substance of the application and the rival claims in respect of delay.

35. So far as delay is concerned, in a sense it may be said that the decision of the Inspectors to complete their Report without responding to Peters & Peters' letter of 11 August 1995 or asking for Mr Clegg's further comments must have been made long ago. Mr Clegg states (unconvincingly, given his background as a commercial solicitor and the wide experience of his solicitors in matters such as this) that as a result of the Inspectors' failure to provide amended provisional criticisms he came to believe that "the inquiry had died a death", and that "The inquiry appeared to be an internal DTI one, and it would have been no surprise, given the delay and the (I believed) valid criticisms made of the process, had it been buried." Nonetheless, it seems to me that the substance of his complaint is the Inspectors' completion of their Report without obtaining his further comments and any further evidence that he wished to provide. If they were at fault in not informing him of any amended criticisms, or if there were no amendments to their criticisms in not informing him of that fact, and in either case giving him an opportunity to respond, it was a continuing fault until their Report was completed. I shall treat the relevant date for the purposes of judicial review as the date of the completion of the Report.

36. Since the Report had been completed on 21 June 2000, the application for judicial review was presented outside the 3-month time limit stipulated by Part 54.5. Mr Hildyard pointed out that no evidence had been put in on behalf of Mr Clegg specifically addressing the question of delay. However, given that Mr Clegg did not know of the completion of the Report until, it would appear, after 22 August, by which time 2 months had elapsed, the Court should be tolerant of some delay beyond the 3 month limit. Mr Clegg could be forgiven for not instructing his solicitors to bring proceedings (assuming he had grounds for judicial review) until receipt of the letter of 22 September 2000. The 3 weeks between receipt of that letter and the filing of the Claim Form were generous and unexplained in evidence, but given the time necessarily involved in preparing proceedings, if the claim were otherwise meritorious I should not shut it out for failure to act promptly.

The merits of the claim for judicial review

37. I therefore turn to consider the merits of the claim for judicial review of the Report. The orders sought are a quashing order and a declaration of its unlawfulness.

38. Since the relevant law was considered and for present purposes is now contained in the judgments of the Court of Appeal in Pergamon Press and Maxwell, it is unnecessary for me to set out the statutory context or powers of Inspectors appointed under section 442. The position of Inspectors appointed under section 177 of the Financial Services Act does not call for separate consideration.

39. I have reservations as to whether a quashing order is available in respect of the completion of the Report. A quashing order is normally made in respect of an act having legal consequences. If the act impugned has no legal consequences, a quashing order is unnecessary, and an appropriate declaration will suffice. In Maxwell, Lord Denning MR said at 536:

I would only say one word about the relief asked. Mr. Ogden (counsel for Mr Maxwell) recognised that the court could not set aside the report, in whole or in part. At most he asked for a declaration that natural justice had not been observed in the making of it. Whilst I would not restrict in any way the court's jurisdiction to grant a declaration, the case must be very rare in which it would be right to make such a bare declaration in the air. This is certainly not a case for it.

Lawton LJ stated at 542 that a report by company inspectors of itself has no legal consequences:

I should say in conclusion that I am doubtful whether, even if I had found on the merits in favour of the plaintiff, I would have adjudged that he was entitled to a declaration that the inquiry had been conducted unfairly or that specified criticisms had been made unfairly. That was the only relief he asked for from this court. Below he had asked for an injunction against the department to restrain further publication of the report, but this he could not get because the department represents the Crown. He had also asked for a declaration that the report was null and void; but before this court, without abandoning this, his counsel did not ask for such a declaration. For my part I cannot see how any such declaration could ever be made in respect of a report made to the Minister under section 165. The courts cannot declare null and void events which have happened. What they can do is to declare that the making of a report shall have no legal consequences, as was done in Kanda's case [1962] AC 322. The report in this case itself neither produced, nor could directly produce, any legal consequences. On receiving it the Minister had to decide what action to take; and even if the inquiry had been conducted unfairly the report might have contained information which the Minister would be under a duty to consider for the purpose of performing his statutory duty to safeguard the interests of shareholders. The fact is that a declaration to the effect that the inquiry had been conducted unfairly or that specified criticisms had been made unfairly would produce no practical result. The Minister would not be stopped from initiating proceedings if he thought that the facts justified such a course. It was submitted that such a declaration would protect the plaintiff's reputation. It might; but the protection would only be temporary if the Minister initiated proceedings; and in any proceedings the fact that the inquiry had been conducted unfairly would be irrelevant.

40. As in Maxwell, it seems to me that the principal, if not the sole, remedy available in the present case is a declaration that the Inspectors acted unfairly, or that the requirements of natural justice have not been complied with. In their judgments in that case, the Court of Appeal made it clear that a declaration in a case such as the present is even more of an exceptional remedy than is normal in judicial review. Lord Denning MR said at [1974] 1 QB 536:

I am not going further into all the details to which we have been subjected, for this reason: I think this line of attack is entirely misconceived. It must be remembered that the inspectors are doing a public duty in the public interest. They must do what is fair to the best of their ability. They will, of course, put to a witness the points of substance which occur to them - so as to give him the chance to explain or correct any relevant statement which is prejudicial to him. They may even recall him to do so. But they are not to be criticised because they may on occasion overlook something or other. Even the most skilled advocate, expert in cross-examination, forgets now and again to put this or that point to a witness. And we all excuse him, knowing how difficult it is to remember everything. The inspector is entitled to at least as much consideration as the advocate. To borrow from Shakespeare, he is not to have "all his faults observed, set in a notebook, learn'd, and conn'd by rote," to make a lawyer's holiday. His task is burdensome and thankless enough as it is. It would be intolerable if he were liable to be pilloried afterwards for doing it. No one of standing would ever be found to undertake it. The public interest demands that, so long as he acts honestly and does what is fair to the best of his ability, his report is not to be impugned in the courts of law.
...
I would only say one word about the relief asked. Mr. Ogden recognised that the court could not set aside the report, in whole or in part. It could not declare it, or any part of it, to be null and void. At most he asked for a declaration that natural justice had not been observed in the making of it. Whilst I would not restrict in any way the court's jurisdiction to grant a declaration, the case must be very rare in which it would be right to make such a bare declaration in the air. This is certainly not a case for it.

Orr LJ said, at 538G:

Mr. Ogden did not in any event pursue the claim for injunction or for a declaration that the report was a nullity, but argued that if there had been a failure of natural justice there should be a declaration in some limited form. I accept that this court would have jurisdiction to grant relief by way of a bare declaration, but agree with Lord Denning M.R. that the circumstances which would justify the grant of such relief in the context of an investigation under section 165 would have to be of a very exceptional kind.

Lawton LJ said, at 542, immediately after the passage cited at paragraph [39] above:

In my judgment a man who has been unfairly criticised in a report made under section 165 is in the same position as one who had been unfairly criticised in a speech made in Parliament. He has suffered "damnum" but not "injuria." Cases may occur (although they are unlikely to do so as long as the Minister appoints competent and experienced professional men as inspectors) in which the inspectors had behaved so unfairly that the public interest requires a court to say so. In my judgment, even if there had been unfairness in the conduct of this inquiry, which there was not, this is not such a case.

41. Mr Collings submitted that the Court of Appeal were not suggesting that no remedy would be available if any breach of the requirements of natural justice were established; and that the references in the above judgments to a declaration being an exceptional remedy did not go beyond the normal rule that judicial review remedies are exceptional remedies. He relied in this connection on the submissions of the UK Government in Fayed v UK (1994) 18 EHHR 393, referred to in the report of the Commission at paragraph 45 and in the judgment of the European Court of Human Rights at paragraph 78. The Court summarised the position as follows:

While Inspectors are accorded broad freedom in reporting on the affairs of public companies, the performance of their investigative functions is attended by not inconsiderable safeguards intended to ensure a fair procedure and reliability of facts.

Maxwell was referred to in the judgment of the Court, but in a footnote and without comment. Mr Collings also referred to a letter dated 10 September 1994 to Mr Clegg from Mr Neil Hamilton, then Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Corporate Affairs in the Department of Trade and Industry, in which the Minister stated:

They (the Inspectors) are masters of their own procedure. However, they must act fairly and reasonably. If they fail to do so, they are accountable to the courts in an action for judicial review.

Mr Collings sought to distinguish this case from the cases envisaged by Lawton LJ on the basis that in this case the Department of Trade and Industry has already decided not to initiate any proceedings against Mr Clegg. He also submitted that if the Court were to refuse to give a remedy for unfairness, there would be a denial of access to the courts.

42. I do not accept Mr Colling's submission on the effect of the judgments in Maxwell. In my judgment the Court of Appeal did intend to lay down that a declaration of unfairness or the like would be made only in the most exceptional circumstances. The suggestion that the refusal of the Court to give a remedy for unfairness amounts to a denial of access to the courts is not consistent with the discretionary nature of remedies in cases of judicial review.

43. It is not easy to reconcile what was said in Maxwell about the exceptional nature of the remedy with the unqualified statement as to the availability of judicial review in the judgment in Fayed. The reconciliation must be, I think, that the European Court in Fayed was concerned principally with the grounds of judicial review, and did not address the issue, common to all judicial review remedies, as to the circumstances in which the Court, in the exercise of its discretion, would grant relief.

44. The reasons for the exceptional nature of relief in cases such as the present are not difficult to see. A declaration made by the court in general terms that inspectors had acted unfairly would be perceived as undermining their entire report, and their conclusions would be seen as deprived of any value, even if the unfairness in question might be minor or affect only part of the report. A declaration that an individual had been treated unfairly would undermine all of the findings and conclusions of the Inspectors adverse to that individual. On the other hand, a particularised declaration, aimed at specific findings or criticisms, would involve the Court in trying the facts in question and constituting itself a court of appeal against the findings of the Inspectors. Parliament has not provided for any such appeal procedure. A declaration of the kind sought in this case is not only a discretionary remedy: it is to be given only in exceptional circumstances.

45. In this connection it is relevant that the damage of which Mr Clegg complains is to his reputation. He seeks "some small redress and vindication". A man's reputation should depend on his conduct. Vindication would take the Court into the area of trying facts, into which the Court cannot venture. Moreover, as Lawton J pointed out in the passage cited at paragraph [40] above, a person may suffer damage to his reputation without suffering legally recoverable damage.

46. In Re Pergamon Press, the Court of Appeal laid down the requirements of fairness or natural justice in relation to enquiries under the Companies Act. Lord Denning MR said, at [1971] Ch 399H:

I am clearly of the opinion that the inspectors must act fairly. This is a duty which rests on them, as on many other bodies, even though they are not judicial, nor quasi-judicial, but only administrative: see Reg. v. Gaming Board for Great Britain, Ex parte Benaim and Khaida [1970] 2 QB 417. The inspectors can obtain information in any way they think best, but before they condemn or criticise a man, they must give him a fair opportunity for correcting or contradicting what is said against him. They need not quote chapter and verse. An outline of the charge will usually suffice.

Sachs LJ, at 403, referred to the need for flexibility in determining what fairness requires. Buckley LJ said, at 407:

If inspectors are disposed to report on the conduct of anyone in such a way that he may in consequence be proceeded against, either in criminal or civil proceedings, the inspectors should give him, if he has not already had it, such information of the complaint or criticism which they may make of him in their report and of their reasons for doing so, including such information as to the nature and effect of the evidence which disposes them so to report, as is necessary to give the person concerned a fair opportunity of dealing with the matter, and they should give him such an opportunity.

47. In the present case, the Inspectors decided on the nature and extent of disclosure to be made to Mr Clegg in 1995, following Peters & Peters' letter of 11 August 1995. It is far too late to challenge that decision, which was in any event consistent with the judgments in Pergamon Press.

48. I do not think that the conduct of the Inspectors towards Mr Clegg taken as a whole can be said to be unfair. He was given an opportunity to address the original provisional criticisms of him in writing following the letter of 25 May 1995 and during the interviews of 5 and 6 October 1995. The object of the Inspectors at the interviews was to elicit Mr Clegg's evidence on the subjects of their provisional criticisms: see the last paragraph of their letter of 11 September 1995. I do not read their acceptance, in that letter, of the fact that he was attending before them "to give evidence not answer the provisional criticisms" as detracting from that stated object. Mr Clegg's solicitors appreciated that this was the object of the interviews: see their letter of 15 September 1995, referred to in paragraph [18] above. The interviews did in fact deal with the matters referred to in the provisional criticisms. The transcript shows that Mr Clegg gave his evidence and comments in relation to these matters. Mr Clegg's solicitors could have elicited, and he could have given, any testimony they thought appropriate that was not given in response to the Inspectors' questions. He and his solicitor could have made any comment they thought appropriate.

49. Mr Clegg was clearly in a position to provide further comments (and I emphasise the word "further") in December 1995, as appears from his solicitors' letter of 4 December 1995. I note, however, that what that letter (and the previous letter from Peters & Peters of 22 November 1995) envisaged was "our comments in relation to the interviews of 5 and 6 October", which is not necessarily the same as comments on the provisional criticisms. The subsequent letter of 13 December was a forensic tactical step. Mr Hildyard accepted that the failure of the Inspectors thereafter to require Mr Clegg's comments to be provided immediately, without waiting for any amended provisional criticisms, was a regrettable oversight. In my judgment their failure to respond appropriately to the letter of 13 December 1995 was an error, but it was not such as to render the entire process unfair or its findings unreliable.

50. Mr Clegg complains that he was not given an opportunity to address the provisional criticisms in writing, rather than orally. He points out, correctly, that it is the normal practice for company inspectors to submit provisional criticisms in writing and to give those criticised an opportunity to address those criticisms in writing and in evidence. However, the normal practice is not mandatory. The Court of Appeal in both Pergamon Press and Maxwell stressed the need for the Inspectors to be able to determine their own procedure, within the constraints of fairness. It is important for there to be flexibility in the conduct of enquiries.

51. Furthermore, I agree with the guidance given in the Investigation Handbook published by the Department of Trade and Industry that once provisional criticisms have been provided to persons criticised, and they have been given an opportunity to address them, it is unnecessary for amended provisional criticisms to be provided to them, unless they contain new criticisms that the person concerned has had no opportunity to address. Company enquiries should be efficiently and expeditiously completed. If time and resources are devoted to Maxwellisation beyond what is necessary, company enquiries may become so unwieldy, prolonged and expensive that they lose their utility and cease to be commissioned.

52. Mr Clegg has not identified any criticisms contained in the Report that were not included in the provisional criticisms sent to him in May 1995. Indeed, he complains that the Inspectors did not alter their provisional criticisms in the light of his evidence and comments in October 1995. He has not identified any criticism made of him in the Report that was not addressed by him in October 1995.

53. I asked Mr Collings to put forward, by way of example, the 6 most important matters that would have been communicated to the Inspectors if Mr Clegg had received amended provisional criticisms: in other words, Mr Clegg's 6 best points, which would establish the assertion in his first witness statement referred to in paragraph [30] above. I did so not in order to determine whether the Inspectors' criticisms in their Report were well-founded (to do so would risk making the High Court into a Court of Appeal against their findings), but to see whether there was any substance in the complaint that Mr Clegg had lost the opportunity to put forward matters of substance.

54. The matters put forward by Mr Collings were unimpressive in the extreme. I shall refer to just three.

55. The first is a letter from South African chartered accountants explaining a note in company accounts as to a supposed loan of a relatively small sum to Jayne Riley, Mr Clegg's half-sister, whose name was associated with bank accounts and share dealings investigated by the Inspectors, and on whose behalf Mr Clegg had a purported power of attorney. This matter is referred to in paragraph 27 of Mr Clegg's third witness statement. The alleged loan is an insignificant item, and especially so when compared with the other evidence obtained by the Inspectors and referred to in their Report.

56. The second matter related to an issue between the Inspectors and Mr Clegg as to whether share transfer schedules had been considered by the directors of Wace at their board meeting on 29 November 1988. The minute of the meeting showed that the schedules had been tabled, and Mr Clegg stated that this did not mean that they were considered or discussed. The transcript of 5 October 1995 shows that Mr Clegg had the opportunity to address this issue and did present his case on it fully. This matter is referred to at paragraph 36 and following of Mr Robertshaw's second witness statement.

57. The third complaint that I shall refer to related to a "sensational" South African newspaper article referred to by the Inspectors during the interview of 5 October 1995 at page 48 of the transcript. Mr Clegg asserted in paragraph 35 of his third witness statement that he would have wanted to put before the Inspectors a more balanced article in the Financial Times. Again, this is a complaint as to an insignificant matter; but in any event the Financial Times article was referred to and summarised by Mr Clegg at page 49 of the transcript. There is no substance in the complaint. Furthermore, if Mr Clegg considered it important to ensure that the Inspectors had the Financial Times article, he could have sent a copy to the Inspectors immediately after the interviews. It is not easy to see why he should have waited for the amended provisional criticisms to send it to them.

58. I compared the matters put forward on behalf of Mr Clegg with the matters referred to in the Report. The findings in the Report as to Mr Clegg's conduct are based on substantial specific evidence, including expert handwriting evidence as to the authorship of documents purporting to be written by someone other than Mr Clegg and analysis of the source and destination of moneys associated with share dealings or the accounts used to finance those dealings. Mr Collings wholly failed to persuade me that if any of the matters now put forward had been provided to the Inspectors in writing the serious criticisms of Mr Clegg contained in the Report would or should have been affected. Mr Clegg's complaints lack substance. He has seized on the regrettable failure of the Inspectors to respond to his solicitors' letter of 13 December 1995 to make an unmeritorious attack on the findings of the Inspectors.

59. Mr Clegg has not established that the Inspectors acted unfairly. There was a defect in their procedure, but he had ample opportunity, that he used, to present his responses to their provisional criticisms. He has not established that if he had been told that the Inspectors had not altered their provisional criticisms, and he had then provided to them additional evidence or comments, the serious criticisms of him contained in the Report would or should have been materially different.

60. For the reasons set out above, I extend Mr Clegg's time to file his application for judicial review; in view of the failure of the Inspectors to respond to the letter of 13 December 1995 I give leave for him to seek relief in respect of the Report. His application for judicial review will be dismissed.


© 2001 Crown Copyright


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