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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Hall & Anor v Elia & Anor [2016] EWHC 1697 (Ch) (12 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/1697.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1697 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) Michaela Hall (2) E-Clear (UK) Plc (in liquidation) |
Applicant in the proceedings /Respondents to the application |
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- and - |
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(1) MILI PETROU ELIA (2) ELIAS ELIA |
Respondent in the proceedings/ Applicants in the application |
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Mr Jonathan O'Mahony (Direct Access counsel) for the First Respondent in the proceedings
Mr Elias Elia (the Second Respondent) in person
Hearing date: 3 May 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Proudman :
- Neither Mrs Elia nor Mr Elia had any legal or beneficial interest in the Property ([2] and [3]),
- Subject to satisfaction and discharge by set-off against the costs liabilities owed to the applicants, Mrs Elia had the benefit of the Charge (which was, pending registration, an equitable charge) securing the sum of €50,000 together with interest at 5% from 17 February 2010, amounting at the date of the Order to a total sum of £45,752.18 ([4] and [5]),
- The Trustee be registered at HM Land Registry as proprietor of the Property forthwith ([6]),
- The Trustee do sell the Property and her solicitors Fieldfisher LLP ("Fieldfisher") have conduct of the sale ([7]),
- Mrs Elia and Mr Elia must deliver up vacant possession of the Property to the Trustee, notifying Fieldfisher that they have done so ([8]) (This part of the Order has already been dealt with- see below.)
- Mrs Elia and Mr Elia must make interim payments on account of costs of £693,572.82 (being the outstanding balance after the set-off) and £43,200 respectively (including VAT) by 4pm on 7 December 2015 ([11] and [13]).
(1) that the Deed of Assignment was a sham,(2) that the Deed of Assignment should alternatively be set aside as a transaction under s.339, s.423 or s. 340,
(3) that Mrs Elia had not paid the £25,000 referred to in the Deed,
(4) that the Charge secured only €50,000 plus interest at 5% from 17 February 2010, to be set off against the sum required to be paid in costs, leaving the sum of £693,527.82 to be paid by her by 4 pm on 7 December 2015. Mr Elia was to pay £43,200 by the same date and time attributable to the claim against him for possession and sale of the Property and a failed recusal application.
Mrs Elia's position
"I consider that, notwithstanding the fact that they are currently debarred from defending the claim and subject to the court's inherent jurisdiction to regulate its own process, the Defendants are entitled at trial to require the Claimant to prove his claim, to cross-examine and to make submissions."
"…we are troubled by the deputy judge's observation that even if the respondents remained debarred from defending the claim they would be 'entitled at trial to require the Claimant to prove his claim and make submissions'…The cases to which he referred in that connection, namely Culla Park v. Richards [2007] EWHC 1687 and JSC BTA Bank v. Ablyazov (No 8) [2013] 1 WLR 1331, do not appear to us necessarily to support so sweeping a proposition. This issue, however, will be a matter for decision by the judge who hears the trial; and having put down a marker in relation to it, we think it better to say no more on the subject at this stage."
"…cannot do anything. They are not in a position to contest anything that we say; they are not entitled to participate. However, that does not mean, of course, I can have any order I want, I am going to have to demonstrate to the court on my pleadings and on my evidence that I am entitled to the relief that I seek…."
"[33]…the Deputy Judge also referred to the Defence and Counterclaim as having been "erased" and said that "any statement dependent for its vitality on the continued existence of the now erased Defence and Counterclaim cannot be invoked to supply, cure or support any claim not, or inadequately advanced in the Particulars of Claim." I do not entirely understand the ambit of this approach but I do not agree with the notion that the Defence had for all purposes ceased to exist. What had happened is that the Respondents had been debarred from defending. To that extent the Defence could not be relied upon by the Respondents, but it would be absurd if the document could not be relied upon by the Claimant as indicating the ambit of the dispute. Were that not the case, matters which were never in issue because of admissions in the pleadings would suddenly become contentious, with the extraordinary and perverse effect that the burden on the claimant at trial would be increased. The obverse would equally be true- a defendant may by virtue of being debarred from defending avoid the consequences of his admissions, thereby casting upon the claimant a burden which may, in reliance upon the admission, have become more difficult or even impossible to discharge. I agree with Mr Smith [of counsel]'s happy observation that "a defence will have left a lasting legacy on the statements of case as a whole. By virtue of what is said in a defence, the content of any reply, or the decision not to rely upon one, will have been affected. Further if the defence indicates to a claimant that the parties are in agreement as to what they disagree about, it will impact upon any consideration of whether to amend the particulars of claim to clarify anything that might be said to have been unclear." It might also for example have been necessary to look at the Claimant's Reply and Defence to Counterclaim which would most likely be difficult to follow without resort to the pleading to which it was responsive.
[34] It follows that I do not consider that the Deputy Judge was precluded from having regard to the Defence and Counterclaim if that document helped him to understand the ambit of the dispute between the parties. However I consider that the Particulars of Claim were in any event sufficiently clear."
The Charge
The Deed of Assignment
Mr Elia's position
(i) That the case against him should not have been heard before the Registrar had given judgment against Mrs Elia.
(ii) The Registrar was biased against Mr Elia and pre-judged the case.
(iii) The Registrar reached the wrong conclusions on the facts and the law.
(iv) The payment he has been ordered to make on account of costs (£43,200) was unjustified.
"turn up with an army of people and sometimes we think they have presidential elections, the people they bring to the court."
The Registrar said that it was for Mr Elia to decide whether or not he wished to apply to amend his case, but Mr Elia replied,
"I have a defence…I can add on it, I can submit a witness statement. You can give me time to submit a witness statement, but definitely I do not have to apply and these gentlemen they turn up and [incur] all sorts of costs."
"I of course mention it in the context where you actually have no part to play in these proceedings unless and until I should make a possession order…"
"By no later than 4pm on Thursday 25 June 2015 Mr Elia shall file and serve any witness statement…upon which he wishes to rely in opposition to any future Order for possession and sale of the Property should such Order otherwise be made in the Office Holder Claim… "
and also on the transcript of that day's proceedings (at p.27),
"MR REGISTRAR JONES: …Mr Elia, you are relevant and having regard to this, it is plain that your mother, subject to any decision that I make with regard to its contents, can put in such defence as she thinks appropriate. In regards to you, however, your position is, as we have established and has been established for a long time since the previous judge's judgment in the High Court [he is referring I assume to the judgment of Andrews J in the company applicant's claim] and the judges in the Court of Appeal [also in the company applicant's claim], your position is that you cannot defend this claim unless and until a possession order is going to be made. Plainly, if no possession order is going to be made, you do not have to defend the claim. As and when it is made, the only reason why you can "defend" the order for possession is because you might have some ground due to the fact that you are living in the property to object to a possession order."
"AND UPON the Second Respondent appearing in person and not being permitted to act for the First Respondent
AND UPON the Second Respondent confirming for the purposes of his defence to the Office Holder Claim that he is available to attend Court on Thursday 24th September and Friday 25th September 2015"
And then the order,
"5. Unless notified otherwise by the Applicants' solicitors in writing, the Second Respondent shall attend Court at 10.30 am on Thursday 24th September 2015 for the purpose of the Court hearing the discrete issue of his defence to the Applicants' claim against him for possession and sale of the property…"
(1) Whatever may have been Mr Elia's understanding beforehand, he knew as early as August 2015 that the two matters (the claims against Mrs Elia and the order for possession and sale) were to be tried together from the Order of 14 July and 29 July 2015 (sealed on 3 August 2015) which reads,
"1. …the Office Holder Claim shall be determined by Mr Registrar Jones at a summary hearing to be held on Monday 21 September 2015 at which only the Applicants' counsel will be heard in respect of the claim against the First Respondent. (The Second Respondent shall additionally be heard on the discrete issue of possession and sale of the Property, if appropriate.)
2. Subject to any further order of the Court, the costs of the Applicants' Application and of the Respondent's Application are reserved to the hearing pursuant to paragraph 1 above."
(2) Further it became clear from the transcript of the hearing, if it was not before (and I have found that it was), that Mr Elia was going to have to give evidence on 25 September 2015 in a combined claim.
(3) Despite the fact that Mr Elia continually interrupted proceedings (see for example the transcript of 24 September p.314, of 14 October 2015 p.9 and [13], [116] and [187] of the Registrar's judgment) Mr Simon Hill of Counsel appeared for Mr Elia as well as Mrs Elia at the trial, although Mr Elia appeared in person again for the hand-down of the judgment on 9 November 2015. Mr Hill knew what the case was about and that there was to be a combined hearing.
(4) The reason why the Registrar did not accept Mr Elia's evidence was, not that he was ill-prepared, but because the Registrar did not believe it. That appears from the main judgment of 9 November 2015 at [192], [195] and [199]. He said that Mr Elia was,
"a wholly unreliable witness because his case changed so much" (at [195]), and
"Mr Elia has provided no explanation for these [set out above in the Judgment] changes to his evidence and therefore for his changes in recollection. He has provided no explanation for the fact that he did not set out either of those sets of fact in his Defence when his memory was fresher. He has not provided any explanation for Mrs Elia's different recollection within her Defence. Absent any plausible explanations, I cannot accept that he suddenly recollected the true facts shortly before his examination or during the course of his cross-examination. The inevitable conclusion which I have reached is that he was not only an unreliable witness but that he chose to present facts he thought most suited his case." (At [197]).
Conclusion