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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Various Claimants v News Group Newspapers Ltd [2020] EWHC 1436 (Ch) (04 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1436.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1436 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Various Claimants |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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News Group Newspapers Ltd |
Defendant |
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Clare Montgomery QC, Antony Hudson QC and Ben Silverstone (instructed by Clifford Chance LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 20th 21st and 22nd May 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Amendment limitation issues
Section 32
"32 Postponement of limitation period in case of fraud, concealment or mistake
(1) Subject to [subsections (3) and (4A) [, (4A) and (4B)]] below, where in the case of any action for which a period of limitation is prescribed by this Act, either
(a) the action is based upon the fraud of the defendant; or
(b) any fact relevant to the plaintiff's right of action has been deliberately concealed from him by the defendant; or
(c) the action is for relief from the consequences of a mistake;
the period of limitation shall not begin to run until the plaintiff has discovered the fraud, concealment or mistake (as the case may be) or could with reasonable diligence have discovered it.
References in this subsection to the defendant include references to the defendant's agent and to any person through whom the defendant claims and his agent.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) above, deliberate commission of a breach of duty in circumstances in which it is unlikely to be discovered for some time amounts to deliberate concealment of the facts involved in that breach of duty."
The current form of the GPOC
""
"6. For the avoidance of any doubt, the Claimants will rely at trial upon such lies, concealment and destruction for the following purposes in this litigation:
6.3 As vitiating any reliance upon a defence of limitation. The Claimants will rely upon NGN's deliberate concealment and destruction of evidence of its wrongdoing, as well as its breach of disclosure obligations and duties, as rebutting any attempt to seek to defend these claims on the basis that they fall outside the statutory limitation period and should therefore be statute-barred."
(The underlined words are sought to be introduced by amendment. The italicised words are in the original.) Although that does not refer in terms to section 32, it is a plain enough reference to it, and the defendant obviously thought so too because in its Defence to that pleading in its current form it "notes" paragraph 6.3 and sets out the concession referred to above "for the purposes of section 32 of the Limitation Act 1980".
"3 Senior NGN Employees took deliberate steps to lie about, conceal and destroy evidence of these habitual and widespread practices in in order to avoid the true nature, scale and extent of such activities being revealed and/or the subject of legal proceedings."
"Despite its full knowledge of these civil claims, the MPS investigation into Operation Weeting, and the clear obligation and duty to preserve documents, NGN deliberately chose through its Senior Employees to destroy or permit the destruction of substantial amounts of highly material evidence. This was done with the deliberate intention of concealing facts relevant to Claimants' and potential Claimants' rights of of action and in circumstances in in which it was unlikely to be discovered, at least for some time."
The opposed amendments
(i) The introduction of a paragraph 5.7:
"5.7. Further, during this litigation NGN has deliberately breached (a) its legal duty by filing false or misleading witness statements in the course of MTVIL (including failing to reveal the targeted deletions in January 2011), for the purposes of or at the Leveson Inquiry and during the MPS investigations; (b) its duty of disclosure by (i) not providing relevant documents, such as disclosure relating to unlawful information gathering at The Sun; and/or the Features Department of The News of the World; and/or commissioning by NGN journalists of private investigators to unlawfully gather information; and/or (ii) by deliberately redacting documents to conceal highly relevant information (see paragraphs 40.5 40.6 below), in circumstances where this was unlikely to be discovered by the Claimants, at least not for some time."
(ii) The underlined words in paragraph 6.3, which I have set out above. This looks like an attempt to introduce the same point.
(iii) The parts of paragraph 16 shown underlined above. This again looks like an attempt to invoke section 32(2).
"20. The Claimants will contend pursuant to section 32 of the Limitation Act 1980 ("the Act") that as a result of the deliberate concealment by NGN or their agents and/or as a result of NGN's deliberate breach of duty of facts relevant to the Claimants' rights of action, the period of limitation did not begin to run until a date less than 6 years before the issue of proceedings."
"22. NGN deliberately concealed facts relevant to the Claimants' rights of action when its journalists and third parties acting on their behalf, covertly and unlawfully obtained individuals' private information by voicemail interception and other unlawful means which commenced in about 1994 and continued until 2011.
23. NGN further deliberately concealed facts relevant to the Claimants' rights of action by (i) public lies and concealment of its wrongdoing and (ii) the destruction and concealment of incriminating evidence."
"24. Further or alternatively, NGN has acted in deliberate breach of duty in circumstances in which the wrongdoing was unlikely to be discovered, at least for some time, through its destruction of documents when it was under a duty to preserve the same and/or its non-disclosure of documents when it was under a duty to provide the same."
"25. As a result of NGN's deliberate concealment at the time of the wrongdoing and its continuing concealment after the event, a very large number of Claimants have had to rely (amongst other matters) on inferences of voicemail interception and other unlawful information gathering in in order to plead and establish individual claims. Such inferences depend on the Claimants establishing relevant generic facts about the unlawful information gathering that NGN's journalists were engaged in both at NGN's The News of of the World and at The Sun, including the fact and nature of the wrongdoing; the time period when it took place; the modus operandi deployed; and the journalists/private investigators involved in the wrongdoing. The Claimants will on rely on their case on concealment and destruction by Senior NGN Employees and their case as set out below to demonstrate that the task of uncovering such facts in order to plead such inferences in the Generic case has been, and continues to be, an ongoing one."
"40. The Claimants have, through the process of this litigation, and through their persistence in obtaining disclosure orders against strenuous resistance by NGN, have [sic] managed to uncover facts that are relevant to their rights of action. These include relevant facts which had been concealed by NGN and which have been discovered by the Claimants since May 2011 and could not with reasonable diligence have been discovered any earlier. It would be disproportionate to set all such facts, however examples are set out in paragraphs 40.1 to 40.7 below. This is without prejudice to the right of each individual Claimant to advance a case that he or she was unaware of any of these facts (and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered such facts) until a later date than the date set out below (particularly when the date to disclosure in in these proceedings, as opposed to a public statement)."
"The effect of NGN's Concealment on Claimants
41. As a a result of of NGN's deliberate concealment of wrongdoing at the time, and NGN's deliberate continuing concealment after the event, as set out above, NGN concealed relevant facts which were required by the Claimants to appreciate that they had a particular cause of action against NGN and to plead it. Without prejudice to any additional facts and matters which may be relied upon by an individual claimant, the following relevant facts which were concealed by NGN are common to many individuals with actual or potential claims against NGN in the MTVIL:
(1) The identities of the potential claimants;
(2) The identities of the journalists involved in voicemail interception and other unlawful information gathering;
(3) The identities of the private detectives instructed to carry out unlawful information gathering on behalf of NGN;
(4) The nature of the wrong-doing and relevant facts relating to it (i.e. voicemail interception, blagging or unlawful surveillance and particulars relating to the same);
(5) The information from the SAP system relating to when individuals were targeted; by whom and/or in relation to which published articles;
(6) The information from the call data relating to when an individuals' or one of their associates' mobile telephones was called;
(7) The existence of articles, some of which have been removed from publicly accessible databases (such as LexisNexis) by NGN;
(8) The interpretation of incriminating evidence such as codes on documents, or euphemisms used by journalists in emails and payment documents which can only be understood by reference to other evidence not disclosed by NGN; and
(9) The time period during which the unlawful information gathering at The News of the World and at The Sun took place.
42. The Claimants will rely on the aforesaid facts and matters to the extent that they are relevant to any individual claim, or any part of it, in support of their case that they did not discover and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered facts relevant to their rights of action until a date which is within six years before the claim was brought. Accordingly, by reason of Section 32(1)(b) and/or (c) of the Limitation Act 1980, any defence of limitation relied upon by NGN affords no defence to their claim."
The defendant's objections to the amendments
(a) The claimants were relying not so much on lack of knowledge of the facts of their causes of action, as on lack of knowledge of the concealment thereafter and of the evidence necessary to prove the facts of their causes of action. In this respect the pleading was not only faulty, it was also unnecessarily prolix and not concise enough to be a proper form of pleading.
(b) When taken with Replies which have been served, and which rely on the totality of the GPOC as it stands, it can be seen that the GPOC is a document which is too general to stand as a proper pleading of section 32, whose application is fact sensitive and particular to individual claimants. All claimants cannot all properly be relying on all the facts pleaded in the document, yet none of them discriminate between facts they rely on and facts that they do not.
(c) Individual claimants should plead the facts which have been concealed from them, when and how those facts were discovered by that claimant, and the basis on which it is said that those facts were not discovered, and could not reasonably have been discovered, by the particular claimant before the date which is 6 years prior to the issue of their proceedings. None of those matters have been pleaded in the GPOC (or the Replies which have been recently served see below).
(d) Ms Montgomery did not accept that section 32 had been pleaded until the amendments, which she said introduced it. Accordingly the amendments were introducing something very materially new.
(e) The attempts to rely on the duties referred to in paragraph 5.7, and repeated elsewhere, did not add anything to the case and relied erroneously on duties owed to persons other than the claimants.
Whether section 32 has already been pleaded
" we accept that the claimants are not under an obligation to reply if the answer to our limitation plea is in the generic pleading, and that is all they want to say by way of answer to our limitation plea, then there is no obligation to file a reply
technically they ought to. What we're more concerned about, and what caused us to seek the order, is where there are individual facts relevant to their answers to our limitation plea that need to be set out, and so certainly we regard it as being a matter of obligation, and that is what is between us. We say they must plead them by way of reply, and Mr Sherborne still wants it to be optional even if there are individual pleas that he wishes to advance in answer to the limitation defence.
MR JUSTICE MANN: Is your position that whatever the strict position on the pleadings may be, you will treat .. whenever you plead limitation you will treat any party well it is all of them actually who have pleaded the concealment claim, that they may rely on those matters in relation to limitation without serving a reply.
MS MONTGOMERY: Yes.
MS MONTGOMERY: As long as the position is clear: we are expecting replies where individual facts are relied upon. We are not expecting replies where generic facts are relied on."
Whether the concealment alleged is of the "fact[s] relevant to the cause of action" as opposed to concealment of the evidence necessary to prove those facts
"34. "The wording of section 32(1)(b) of the Limitation Act 1980 in my judgment is such that a narrow interpretation is necessary. In order to give relief to the plaintiff any new fact must be relevant to the plaintiff's 'right of action' and is to be contrasted with a fact relevant, for example, to 'the plaintiff's action' or 'his case' or 'his right to damages'. The right of action in this case was complete at the moment of arrest. No other ingredient was necessary to complete the right of action. Accordingly, whilst I acknowledge that the new facts might make the plaintiff's case stronger or his right to damages more readily capable of proof they do not in my view bite upon the 'right of action' itself. They do not affect the 'right of action', which was already complete, and consequently are not relevant to it.
35. "Neill LJ said:
"In one sense it is true to say that the tort of false imprisonment has two ingredients; the fact of imprisonment and the absence of lawful authority to justify it. It is to be noted that in his speech in Weldon v Home Office [1992] AC 58 , at 162 Lord Bridge spoke of the tort as having those two separate ingredients. Indeed at a trial these two aspects of the tort are likely to be investigated. But as I understand the law, the gist of the action of false imprisonment is the mere imprisonment. The plaintiff need not prove that the imprisonment was unlawful or malicious; he establishes a prima facie case if he proves that he was imprisoned by the defendant. The onus is then shifted to the defendant to prove some justification for it. If that be right, one looks at the words in section 32(1)(b) , 'any fact relevant to the plaintiff's right of action'. It seems to me that those words must mean any fact which the plaintiff has to prove to establish a prime facie case."
That sets up the distinction that Ms Montgomery seeks to draw. I accept that distinction as a matter of law.
(a) Was there a reasonable expectation of privacy in relation to the information accessed, utilised and/or published by the newspapers?
(b) If so, was that privacy wrongly intruded upon, or breached, by the acts in question.
"40. The Claimants have, through the process of this litigation, and through their persistence in obtaining disclosure orders against strenuous resistance by NGN, have managed to uncover facts that are relevant to their rights of action. These include relevant facts which had been concealed by by NGN and which have been discovered by the Claimants since May 2011 and could not with reasonable diligence have been discovered any earlier. It would be disproportionate to set out all such facts, however examples are set out in paragraphs 40.1 to 40.7 below. This is without prejudice to the right of each individual Claimant to advance a case that he or she was unaware of any of these facts (and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered such facts) until a later date than the date set out below (particularly when the date refers to disclosure in in these proceedings, as opposed to a public statement)."
The lack of proper individual pleading
"60 A claimant who proposes to invoke section 32(1)(b) in order to defeat a Limitation Act defence must prove the facts necessary to bring the case within the paragraph. He can do so if he can show that some fact relevant to his right of action has been concealed from him either by a positive act of concealment or by a withholding of relevant information, but, in either case, with the intention of concealing the fact or facts in question."
"MR JUSTICE MANN: So what is underpinning your submissions is -- well, you are flagging that you may take the point that any defendant who does not plead individual matters relating to them will be faced at trial with an argument that they are not allowed to because they actually haven't served a reply.
MS MONTGOMERY: Correct. And as Mr Sherborne said when I made that point last time, "It is up to us, it is our choice". And I accept that, it is their choice but they are on risk "
The subsequent service of Replies and the application to strike them out
"The Claimant was not aware of [the facts just referred to] until a date within 6 years prior to the issue of these proceedings."
"The Claimant was not aware of these facts, and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered them, until a date within 6 years prior to the issue of these proceedings."
(a) There is to be a trial in this litigation in October of this year. Time is now precious and I doubt that it is best spent arguing about pleadings.
(b) As Ms Montgomery frequently said, as did Mr Sherborne, the section 32 point in this case (as in all cases) is capable of being intensely fact-sensitive. That usually means that it is best dealt with at a trial. Of course, if the pleadings are not set up so as to generate or permit the relevant factual dispute then there would be no facts to be sensitive about, but such fact-sensitivity often makes detailed disputes about pleadings unhelpful.
(c) If Ms Montgomery takes the view that the Replies do not provide any necessary pleading as to knowledge or means of knowledge, then it would seem to me at first sight to be open to her to make a request for further information. That may well be a better way to pursue this litigation than an application to strike out for want of particularity (which I think is an element of her case). While I accept what Cave (and Paragon Finance v DB Thakerar & Co [1999] 1 All ER 400) say about the burden of proof in relation to section 32, I do not think that either of them necessarily determine what might be quite interesting questions of a shifting burden of proof on discovery of concealment and "reasonable diligence" discovery, and what might be necessary as a matter of pleading for a claimant to raise those points. While not encouraging yet more pleadings in this pleading-rich litigation, it occurs to me that both sides might have to plead in relation that. So far as the defendant is concerned, if it is going to advance a positive case that a claimant discovered the relevant facts, or ought to have discovered them if he/she had exercised reasonable diligence, more than 6 years before his/her claim form, I would have thought that that ought to be pleaded too.
The section 32(2) point
"38. Further or alternatively, NGN has acted in in deliberate breach of duty in circumstances in in which its wrongdoing was unlikely to be discovered, at least for some time, through its destruction of documents when it was under a duty to preserve the same and/or its non-disclosure of documents when it was under a duty to provide the same. In each case the duty arose as a result of notification to NGN of legal claims/the legal process and/or requests for documents by the MPS and/or individual professional duties (as set out below)".
Other points
Conclusion on the limitation-based amendments