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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Love v Fawcett & Anor [2011] EWHC 1686 (Ch) (21 June 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/1686.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1686 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GARY LOVE |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) ROBERT FAWCETT (2) NORTHAM WORLDWIDE |
Defendants |
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Tape Transcription Department, 165 Fleet Street, 8th Floor, London, EC4A 2DY
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(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MORGAN:
"It will be a question of fact as to whether a solicitor is jointly acting for two parties. However, it is necessary to distinguish a joint retainer from three other situations where joint privilege will not arise."
"If one party (party A) instructs a lawyer on behalf of another (party B) then party A is acting merely as an agent of party B. In such circumstances, a lawyer-client relationship will only exist between party B and the lawyer. Accordingly, party B will be able to maintain privilege against party A in respect of any independent communications it has with the lawyer to which party A is not privy. However, if parties A and B subsequently fall out, party B will not be able to maintain privilege in respect of communications to which party A was privy since such communications are not confidential from party A.
"Joint privilege can also arise where even though party A and party B have not jointly retained a lawyer (and only one of them is party to the relevant lawyer-client relationship), they have a joint interest in the subject matter of the communication. The defining characteristic of this aspect of joint privilege is that the joint interest must exist at the time that the communication comes into existence. So joint privilege will only arise in respect of a document created during the period when the joint interest subsists; in other words, the documents must have come into being for the furtherance of the joint purpose or interest."
I can break off reading at that point and pick the matter up again at paragraph 6.08:
"If a joint interest exists then the same principles as those set out above in relation to joint retainers will apply. Accordingly, neither party can assert privilege as against the other in respect of communications coming into existence at the time the joint interest subsisted; hence, each party to the relationship can obtain disclosure of the other's (otherwise privileged) documents so far as they concern the joint purpose or interest. However, both parties are entitled to maintain privilege as against the rest of the world. As with a joint retainer, the privilege is not lost simply because the parties subsequently fall out."
Paragraph 6.09 is headed: "Examples of joint interests," and it is in these terms:
"Whilst not a rigidly defined concept, common examples of where such a joint interest might arise are between:
a trustee and beneficiary;
a parent company and its wholly-owned subsidiary;
a company and its shareholders;
a company and its director, and
partners."
"As stated above, in order for a joint privilege to arise the joint interest must exist at the time that the communication comes into existence. If the parties subsequently fall out and sue one another, neither of them can claim privilege as against the other in respect of any documents that are caught by the joint privilege, as the original joint interest is not destroyed by a subsequent disagreement between the parties.
However, any documentation that comes into existence after a dispute arises between the parties, and thus at a time when the joint interest no longer subsists (and therefore outside the joint interest), will not be caught by the joint privilege. Therefore, a party will be able to assert privilege as against the other in relation to any such documentation, even if the latter has borne the expense of the communication. For example, privilege can be asserted for documents coming into existence in relation to hostile or adverse litigation between shareholders and the company, or communications concerning the directors in their personal capacity. Likewise, privilege can be asserted as against the beneficiary for communications between a trustee and his solicitor in relation to a dispute with the beneficiary or communications with the trustee not acting in that capacity. In a similar vein, advice obtained by a partner in dispute with his fellow partners in relation to his individual interests will be privileged as against the other partners.
will indicate how that should be addressed.
"In so doing he was recognising the effect of a line of cases which have established that advice sought or given for the purpose of effecting iniquity is not privileged."
In my judgment this principle has no part to play in the present case, at any rate not in relation to the matters that have been debated on this application. There is simply no case that can be put or indeed has been put that the material which is otherwise privileged was brought into existence for a purpose of effecting iniquity. The criticism which Mr Warwick makes of the defendant's conduct is not of that character. What is said on behalf of Mr Love is that the defence being run in this action is inequitable. That is not for me to decide. That will be investigated and determined at the trial. But even if Mr Love is right that the defence is an inequitable defence that does not mean that the communications about which there is a dispute today were brought into existence for the purpose of effecting iniquity. Indeed, Mr Love's whole case now that he has seen those communications is not that they were brought into existence for the purpose of effecting iniquity; instead they were brought into existence for the purpose of discussing and giving effect to his entitlement. So I reject the argument based upon the absence of privilege in a case of iniquity.
"The starting point is the correspondence will only be protected by without prejudice privilege if it is written for the purpose of a genuine attempt to compromise a dispute between the parties. It is not a precondition that the correspondence bears the heading: "without prejudice." If it is clear from the surrounding circumstances that the parties were seeking to compromise the action, evidence of the content of those negotiations will, as general rule, not be admissible."
The point is expanded on in paragraph 24.22. There it is described as being a difficult question, alternatively, a nice point and one where there is no easy rule. The textbook refers in a footnote to an unreported case Prudential Insurance Company of America v. Prudential Assurance Co. Limited [2003] EWCA Civ 1154 and a reported case, albeit reported under a different name, Barnetson v. Framlington Group Limited [2007] 1 WLR 2443. I was asked to consider both those cases, which went different ways. In the Prudential case the matter was held not to be without prejudice. In the Barnetson case the opposite result was reached. The principal judgment in Barnetson was given by Auld LJ and he summarised the correct approach to a question of this kind in paragraphs 33 and 34 in particular. In paragraph 33 he said this:
"It is undoubtedly a highly case sensitive question, or put another way, the dividing line may not always be clear. The various judicial pronouncements in the leading cases to which I have referred do not provide any precise pointers, and there are seemingly no other authorities directly in point."