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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Lewis & Ors v Ward Hadaway (a firm) [2015] EWHC 3503 (Ch) (21 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3503.html Cite as: [2016] 1 Costs LO 49, [2016] 4 WLR 6, [2015] EWHC 3503 (Ch), [2015] WLR(D) 551 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge)
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RICHARD LEWIS AND OTHERS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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WARD HADAWAY (A Firm) |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Charles Phipps (instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 23rd October 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr John Male QC (sitting as a Deputy Judge):
Introduction
The claims
Court fees and statements of value
"The fees set out in column 2 of Schedule 1 are payable in the Supreme Court and in county courts in respect of the items described in column 1 in accordance with and subject to the directions specified in that column."
"1. Starting proceedings (High Court and county court)
1.1 On starting proceedings...to recover a sum of money where the sum claimed..."
£300" to "exceeds £300,000 or is not limited", with corresponding fees in column 2 which ranged from £35 to £1,670.
"The claimant must, in the claim form, state-
(a) the amount of money claimed;
(b) that the claimant expects to recover-
(i) not more than £5,000;
(ii) more than £5,000 but not more than £25,000; or
(iii) more than £25,000; or
(c) that the claimant cannot say how much is likely to be recovered."
"The statement of value in the claim form does not limit the power of the court to give judgment for the amount which it finds the claimant is entitled to."
"Value
If you are claiming a fixed amount of money (a 'specified amount') write the amount in the box at the bottom right-hand corner of the claim form against 'amount claimed'.
If you are not claiming a fixed amount of money (an 'unspecified amount') under 'Value' write "I expect to recover" followed by whichever of the following applies to your claim:
- 'not more than £5,000' or
- 'more than £5,000 but not more than £25,000' or
- 'more than £25,000'
If you are not able to put a value on your claim, write 'I cannot say how much I expect to recover'."
What the Claimants did in the claim forms
"The Claimants expect to recover damages limited to £15,000.00".
"Limited to £15,000".
The District Judges' de cisions
The application to strike out
"(2) The court may strike out a statement of case if it appears to the court –
...
(b) that the statement of case is an abuse of the court's process or is otherwise likely to obstruct the just disposal of the proceedings."
"The Claimants had claims which they valued at over £300,000. In circumstances where they always intended to recover the full value of those claims, and for reasons of their own convenience, they engaged in a scheme under which they paid on issue a much lower fee than the fee that was appropriate to their claims, and for that purpose made factual misrepresentations on the face of their claim forms.
The fees paid were inappropriate because (i) they were not the fees required by the CPFO 2008; and/or (ii) because the claimants had artificially and temporarily reduced the value of their claims, with the pre-formed intention of subsequently increasing that value by amendment.
The Claimants continued to pursue this scheme in the full knowledge that it had been condemned as an abuse by two district judges."
"a use of the court process for a purpose or in a way which is significantly different from the ordinary and proper use of the court process."
"Litigants are not without scrupulous examination of all the circumstances to be denied the right to bring a genuine subject of litigation before the court".
"This does not however mean that the court must hear in full and rule on the merits of any claim or defence which a party to litigation may choose to put forward. For there is, as Lord Diplock said at the outset of his speech in Hunter v. Chief Constable of the West Midlands Police [1982] AC 529, 536, an
"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; those which give rise to the instant appeal must surely be unique. 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."
"...a broad, merits-based judgment which takes account of the public and private interests involved and also takes account of all the facts of the case, focusing attention on the crucial question whether, in all the circumstances, a party is misusing or abusing the process of the court..."
"13. A claimant may have various reasons for not including in his claim heads of damages to which he would arguably be entitled, if he established liability. He may decide that the cost of proving a head of loss is disproportionate to the sum that he thinks he is likely to recover. Or he may decide that the evidence that would have to be adduced in order to prove a head of loss would cause him embarrassment which he wishes to avoid. Or he may decide not to seek to recover a head of loss because he is confident that it will be made good to him by a third party. A claimant is fully entitled to decide what to include in his claim. If he excludes a head of loss from his claim, and he is awarded judgment on his pleaded claim, he will normally be precluded as a matter of law from subsequently starting proceedings to recover the excluded head of loss: see Henderson v Henderson (1843) 3 Hare 100. That is the chance that a claimant must take if he excludes from his claim sums which he could claim from the defendant. But there is nothing in the general law which positively obliges a claimant to include in his pleaded case all the claims which he could arguably advance against a defendant."
"3. Abuse of process. Mr Murrin [of DACB] alleges that there was a scheme to avoid paying the appropriate fee. This is not quite correct. In each case, this firm decided to pay the Court fee in relation to each Claim Form because there was no disbursement funding in place to pay any Court fee. We intended to pay an increased Court fee when disbursement funding was in place, and at the same time increasing the amount claimed. However, ATE insurance for the Claimants had not been obtained by the date of service in any of these claims, so in each case my firm provided from its own resources the increased Court fee in order to increase the amount which could be claimed.
4. While the Court fee paid was £245 or £30, the amount claimed had to be limited to £15,000 or £300, and similarly for the other court fees and limits set out in PJM1 p.147. Therefore while this continued the Claimant expected to recover damages limited to £15,000, £300 or other amount in the statement of value. I therefore thought that the Statement of Truth was correct. In any event, in relation to the claims by Mr Gill, the limit to £300,000 at that time appeared correct on any view.
5. I realise that this interpretation of the Claim Form may be wrong, and the Statement of Truth may therefore be wrong. However, the judgment of District Judge Pescod in Tsioupra-Lewis v Blacks of 23 February 2015 at [33], see PJM1 p.125 at p135, concludes that our interpretation was not wrong, albeit that three other District Judges have reached opposite conclusions."
"41. The language of the CPR supports the existence of a jurisdiction to strike a claim out for abuse of process even where to do so would defeat a substantive claim. The express words of CPR 3.4(2)(b) give the court power to strike out a statement of case on the ground that it is an abuse of the court's process. It is common ground that deliberately to make a false claim and to adduce false evidence is an abuse of process. It follows from the language of the rule that in such a case the court has power to strike out the statement of case. There is nothing in the rule itself to qualify the power. It does not limit the time when an application for such an order must be made. Nor does it restrict the circumstances in which it can be made. The only restriction is that contained in CPR 1.1 and 1.2 that the court must decide cases in accordance with the overriding objective, which is to determine cases justly.
42. Under the CPR the court has a wide discretion as to how its powers should be exercised: see eg Biguzzi v Rank Leisure Plc [1999] 1 WLR 1926. So the position is that the court has the power to strike out a statement of case for abuse of process but at the same time has a wide discretion as to which of its many powers to exercise…..
.....
49. As noted at para 42 above, the court has a wide discretion as to how to exercise its case management powers. These include the power to strike out the whole or any part of a statement of case at whatever stage it is made, even if it is made at the end of the trial. However the cases stress the flexibility of the CPR: see eg Biguzzi per Lord Woolf MR at p 1933B, Asiansky Television v Bayer-Rosin [2001] EWCA Civ 1792; [2002] CPLR 111 per Clarke LJ at para 49 and Aktas v Adepta [2010] EWCA Civ 1170, [2011] QB 894, where Rix LJ said at para 92: "Moreover, it should not be forgotten that one of the great virtues of the CPR is that, by providing more flexible remedies for breaches of rules as well as a stricter regulatory environment, the courts are given the powers and the opportunities to make the sanction fit the breach. That is the teaching of one of the most important early decisions on the CPR to be found in Biguzzi v Rank Leisure plc." The draconian step of striking a claim out is always a last resort, a fortiori where to do so would deprive the claimant of a substantive right to which the court had held that he was entitled after a fair trial."
The application for summary judgment
"An action founded on tort shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued."
"An action founded on simple contract shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued."
"(1) Proceedings are started when the court issues a claim form at the request of the claimant.
(2) A claim form is issued on the date entered on the form by the court."
"Proceedings are started when the court issues a claim form at the request of the claimant (see rule 7.2) but where the claim form as issued was received in the court office on a date earlier than the date on which it was issued by the court, the claim is "brought" for the purposes of the Limitation Act 1980 and any other relevant statute on that earlier date."
"30. In Barnes v St Helens Metropolitan Borough Council [2006] EWCA Civ 1372 [2007] 1 WLR 879 Tuckey LJ (with whom Arden and Lloyd LJJ agreed) said:
"I start simply by looking at the words used in the statute and the Rules. I approach them by expecting to find the expiry of a limitation period fixed by reference to something which the claimant has to do, rather than something which someone else such as the court has to do. The time at which a claimant "brings" his claim form to the court with a request that it be issued is something he has to do; the time at which his request is complied with is not because it is done by the court and is something over which he has no real control. Put another way one act is unilateral and the other is transactional. Looked at in this way I do not agree with the judge or Mr Norman that in this context the verb "to bring" has the same meaning as the verb "to start". The 1980 Act can perfectly properly be construed so that in the context of the CPR a claim is brought when the claimant's request for the issue of a claim form (together with the court fee) is delivered to the court office. Paragraph 5 of the Practice Direction gives sensible guidance to ensure that the actual date of delivery is readily ascertainable by recording the date of receipt." (Emphasis added)
31. Tuckey LJ makes it clear that the legal question is the meaning of the word "brought" in the Limitation Act. The Practice Direction is no more than sensible guidance. In addition one must not forget that proceedings can be started on line, and that the Practice Direction cannot apply to such cases.
32. Taken literally, the ratio of Barnes v St Helens Metropolitan Borough Council is that once the claimant has delivered his request for the issue of a claim form to the court office, he has "brought" his action. If Mr Last's evidence is correct, Messrs Page did that in the present case.
33. However, literalism is not fashionable, so it is also necessary to consider the policy that underpins the decision. Tuckey LJ dealt with this too. He pointed out that this meant that a claimant had the full period of limitation within which to "bring" his claim; and that it would be unjust if he had to take the risk that the court would fail to process it in time. It does not seem to me that the reason why the court fails to process the request in time alters the justice of the case. If it is unjust for the claimant to take the risk that the court staff are on strike, it seems to me to be equally unjust for him to have to take the risk that a member of the court staff might erroneously put his request in the shredder or the confidential waste, or that his request is destroyed by flood or fire in the court office, or is taken in a burglary. Each of these might be reasons why the court failed to process the request in time. Essentially the construction of the Act that this court favoured in Barnes v St Helens Metropolitan Borough Council is based on risk allocation. The claimant's risk stops once he has delivered his request (accompanied by the claim form and fee) to the court office. PD 7 cannot, in my judgment, alter the correct construction of the Act.
34. This is not a new approach. In Aly v Aly (1 January 1984), which also concerned time limits in the context of limitation periods, Eveleigh LJ said:
"It would be indeed surprising and harsh if a party who had done all that was required of him, should find himself unable to obtain the assistance of the court because the court itself had failed in some matter of procedure. Furthermore, when the rules lay down a time limit which has to be observed by a party to the litigation, their aim is to achieve whatever particular purpose is in mind by controlling the action of the party, and where on the reading of the appropriate rule that seems to be its intention it would be quite ridiculous, as I see it, to make the party responsible for anything that has subsequently to be done by the court. "
35. Thus the Court of Appeal held that:
"… one can only treat the words "apply to the Court" as meaning doing all that is in your power to do to set the wheels of justice in motion according to the procedure that is laid down for the pursuit of the relief which you are asking."
"38. If, therefore, the claimants establish that the claim form was delivered in due time to the court office, accompanied by a request to issue and the appropriate fee, the action would not, in my judgment, be statute barred."
"56. It is, in a way, concerning that the fate of a claim should depend upon the miscalculation by such a relatively small amount of a court fee. I have considered whether it is so de minimis that the Court should not take it into account, or make some exception or allowance.
57. However, as I read Lewison LJ's judgment in the Court of Appeal, the rationale of treating the receipt by the court of the required documents as sufficient and as transferring to the court the risk of loss or delay thereafter (see paragraph 31 of Lewison LJ's judgment) is that it is unfair to visit such risk on a claimant after he has done all that he reasonably could do to bring the matter before the court for its process to follow. Lewison LJ expressly described what had to be established by the Claimants: that the claim form was (a) delivered in due time to the court office, accompanied by (b) a request to issue and (c) the appropriate fee. In my judgment, the failure to offer the appropriate fee meant that the Claimants had not done all that was required of them; and they had left it too late to correct the error, which was a risk they unilaterally undertook."
Conclusion