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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Casson & Anor v The Law Society [2009] EWHC 1943 (Admin) (20 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/1943.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1943 (Admin), [2010] BPIR 49, [2010] PNLR 9 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
ON APPEAL FROM THE SOLICITORS'
DISCIPLINARY TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE MADDISON
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Michael Casson and Melvin Wales |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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The Law Society |
Respondent |
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A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
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Mr Michael McLaren QC (instructed by Townshends LLP) &
Ms Jayne Willetts (Solicitor Advocate, Townshends LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 7 July 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Maddison:
"Schedule 1A shall have effect with respect to the provision by solicitors of services which are not of the quality which it is reasonable to expect of them."
Schedule 1A is entitled "Inadequate Professional Services". Its provisions which are relevant to these appeals are as follows:
"1(1) The Council may take any of the steps mentioned in paragraph 2 ("the steps") with respect to a solicitor where it appears to them that the professional services provided by him in connection with any matter in which he or his firm have been instructed by a client have, in any respect, not been of the quality which it is reasonable to expect of him as a solicitor."
"1(2) The Council shall not take any of the steps unless they are satisfied that in all the circumstances of the case it is appropriate to do so."
"1(3) In determining in any case whether it is appropriate to take any of the steps, the Council may – "
(a) have regard to the existence of any remedy which it is reasonable to expect to be available to the client in civil proceedings; and
(b) where proceedings seeking any such remedy have not been begun by him, have regard to whether it is reasonable to expect him to begin them.
"2(1) The steps are – "
a) determining that the costs to which the solicitor is entitled in respect of his services ("the costs") are to be limited to such amount as may be specified in the determination and directing him to comply, or to secure compliance, with such one or more of the permitted requirements as appear to the Council to be necessary in order for effect to be given to their determination;
(b) directing him to secure the rectification, at his expense or that of his firm, of any such error, omission or other deficiency arising in connection with the matter in question as they may specify;
(c) directing him to pay such compensation to the client as the Council sees fit to specify in the direction;
(d) directing him to take, at his expense or at that of his firm, such other action in the interests of the client as they may specify.
"2(3) The power of the Council to take any such steps is not confined to cases where the client may have a cause of action against the solicitor for negligence."
"3(1) The amounts specified in a direction by virtue of paragraph 2(1)(c) shall not exceed £15,000."
"5(1) If a solicitor fails to comply with a direction given under this Schedule, any person may make a complaint in respect of that failure to the Tribunal; but no other proceedings whatever shall be brought in respect of it."
"5(2) On the hearing of such a complaint the Tribunal may, if it thinks fit …. direct that the direction be treated, for the purpose of enforcement, as if it were contained in an order by the High Court."
The Council referred to in these provisions is the Council of the Law Society. In practice its functions under Schedule 1A are delegated to adjudicators such as Mr Lawley and Mr Waterworth. The Tribunal referred to in paragraphs 5(1) and 5(2) is the SDT.
By section 281(1):
"…. where a bankrupt is discharged, the discharge releases him from all bankruptcy debts….".
Section 382(1) provides:
"'Bankruptcy debt' in relation to a bankrupt, means ….any of the following:
a) any debt or liability to which he is subject at the commencement of the bankruptcy;
b) any debt or liability to which he may become subject after the commencement of the bankruptcy (including after his discharge from bankruptcy) by reason of any obligation incurred before the commencement of the bankruptcy".
Section 382(3) provides:
" For the purposes of references ….to a debt or liability, it is immaterial whether the debt or liability is present or future, whether it is certain or contingent or whether its amount is fixed or liquidated, or is capable of being ascertained by fixed rules or as a matter of opinion; and references ….. to owing a debt are to be read accordingly."
"Where it is determined that … any person has misrepresented …. any material fact and in consequence of the misrepresentation….a payment has been made of a benefit….the Secretary of State shall be entitled to recover the amount of any payment which he would not have made…but for the misrepresentation…".
"I do not consider that those liabilities should be treated as a single, continuing liability for the purposes of section 281(1) of the 1986 Act".
"If the tribunal finds the complaint well-founded it shall make a declaration to that effect and may also make a protective award".
Section 190 made provision for the employees' entitlement to remuneration pursuant to a protective award.
"…all claims by creditors are provable by debts against the company…whether they are present or future, certain or contingent, ascertained or sounding only in damages."
Rule 13.12(1) provided:
"'Debt' in relation to the winding up of a company means…
(a) any debt or liability to which the company is subject at the date on which it goes into liquidation;
(b) any debt or liability to which the company may become subject after that date by reason of any obligation incurred before that date; …".
Rule 13.12(3) provided:
"…it is immaterial whether the debt or liability is present or future…certain or contingent…".
"For us, the principal question is whether or not the provisions of the 1992 Act can be properly construed so as to fulfil and enact into English law the provisions of the consolidated Council Directive 98/59/EC of 20 July 1998 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to collective redundancies (the Directive). The Directive does not feature in Sir Donald's judgment, and was not in our papers. We had to call for it. Yet it is central to the case, for, if Sir Donald is right, the UK will have failed to implement the Directive properly."
In paragraph 9 the Court referred to the duty of the UK under EU law to take all measures necessary to ensure that infringements of EU law were penalised under conditions which made the penalty "effective, proportionate and dissuasive". In paragraph 56 it observed that a protective award under section 189 of the 1992 Act was to be a measure that enforced the obligation [to consult] placed on the employer, which obligation was to be backed by a penalty which was "effective, proportionate and dissuasive".
a) The liability to pay a protective award was at the very least a contingent liability within the meaning of Rule 13.12(3) of the Insolvency Rules, 1986 (see para 57 of the judgment).
b) The word "may" in section 189(2) of the 1992 Act was to be read as a word of empowerment rather than as the statutory bestowal of a judicial discretion (see para 63).
c) In the Haine case, a protective award for the maximum amount permitted was not only right, but inevitable (see para 65).
d) "In these circumstances, and against this background, it seems to us unreal to describe the protective award as depending upon the exercise of a judicial discretion. The tribunal had no option but to make an award. If it had failed to do so its ruling would have been open to challenge as perverse. In our judgment, therefore, it is in no sense stretching the language of Rule 13.12(1)(b) to describe the protective award as being "a liability to which the company may become subject after it went into liquidation by reason of an obligation incurred before that date." Indeed, we think that is precisely what it is." (See para 67).
e) It followed that the protective awards were contingent liabilities which had arisen before the liquidation of the company and were therefore provable in the liquidation (see paras 88 & 89).
"…there is no doubt in our minds that an employment law analysis of the case, based as it is on the Directive and the decision of this court in Susie Radin, provides a powerful basis upon which to distinguish both Glenister and Steele."
Paragraph 75 of the judgment reads:
"In our judgment, Glenister is readily distinguishable…We do not doubt either the correctness of the decision, or the fact that it is binding on us. However, we are of the view there is a plain distinction between a prospective and discretionary award of costs (which is not only dependent upon outcome but upon a host of case specific factors and is wholly uncertain) and a liability for a protective award which has arisen directly from the breach of the duty to consult and which, based on the legislative scheme we have described, will be for the maximum period and will only be reduced if there are mitigating circumstances justifying a reduction."
In paragraph 85, the Court said:
"In our judgement, Steele is distinguishable for similar reasons to those which make Glenister distinguishable. In Steele the Secretary of State plainly had a discretion whether or not to make the determination referred to, and until he did so, no liability arose. However, and for the reasons we have already given, this is, in our judgment in no sense analogous to the "discretion" which arises in the Employment Tribunal following a breach by employers of their duty to consult under section 188. Under the latter it is the employer's breach which triggers the procedure under sections 189 and 190, and rendered them liable both to the declaration and the protective award under section 189(2)."
i) First, the LCS has to decide to investigate whether inadequate professional services have been provided. Nothing in Schedule 1A to the 1974 Act imposes a duty on the LCS to do so, and we were informed by Mr McLaren QC for the respondent that in practice the LCS sometimes declines to entertain complaints at all. This is borne out by a LCS publication entitled "Common Questions" with which this Court has been provided, on page 1 of which it is said that "There [are] some types of complaints that are not appropriate for us to deal with." Six examples then follow. One is "complaints made where it would be more appropriate for you to take court proceedings."ii) If the LCS does decide to investigate the complaint, an adjudicator then has to decide whether inadequate professional services have been rendered.
iii) If the adjudicator decides that such services have been rendered, and thus upholds the complaint, it is in my view clear that the adjudicator then has discretion whether or not to direct the payment of compensation. Such a direction is only one of four steps available to the adjudicator under paragraph 2(1) of the Schedule 1A; and the word "may" in paragraph 1(1) in my judgment confers a discretion whether or not to take any of the steps. Indeed, paragraph 1(2) requires the adjudicator not to take any of the steps unless satisfied that it is appropriate to do so.
iv) If the LCS decides to investigate the complaint, the adjudicator upholds it and (notwithstanding paragraph 1(2)) exercises his or her discretion to direct the payment of compensation, the award is not at that stage enforceable, and may never become so. It becomes enforceable only if:
a) a complaint is made to the SDT arising out of a failure to comply with the direction (see para 5(1) of Schedule 1A); andb) the SDT, in the exercise of its further discretion, sees fit to direct that the direction be treated for the purpose of enforcement as if it were contained in an order made by the High Court (see para 5(2)). The fact that an adjudicator's award is not enforceable without more is a factor which in my view points strongly away from the award's constituting a debt or liability. The observations of Sir Martin Nourse in Steele to which I referred earlier in this judgment are consistent with that view.
"The SDT breached the appellants' human rights by imposing the penalty it did without finding any conduct on the part of the appellants which merited such penalty and over which the appellants had control."
I have not found this ground of appeal easy to follow. Quite simply, the SDT upheld the adjudicators' findings that both appellants had rendered inadequate professional services. The reference in paragraph 6 to the appellants having no control appears to be related to the matter raised in paragraph 7, to which I now turn.
Lord Justice Richards: