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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Broomhead v National Westminster Bank PLC & Anor [2021] EWHC 105 (Ch) (28 January 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/105.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 105 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
JONATHAN MARK BROOMHEAD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) NATIONAL WESTMINSTER BANK PLC (2) THE ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC |
Defendants |
____________________
Charlotte Eborall (instructed by Addleshaw Goddard LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 22 October 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Chief Master Marsh:
(1) In the First Claim (as defined in the May Judgment), Mr Broomhead sought damages of £13.78 million relying upon a collateral contract based upon three promises he alleged had been made by Mr Mosley, who was an employee of the Bank. Two promises were said to have been made on 22 March 2004 and one promise on 21 May 2004.
(2) The promises are centred upon an alleged agreement by the Bank to lend money to Mr Broomhead and his businesses for a term of 20 years (matching an offer Mr Broomhead had received from Yorkshire Bank). In addition, Mr Mosley is alleged to have promised that the overdraft facility would be renewed automatically, provided the overdraft limit was not exceeded, and later, on 21 May 2004, when Mr Mosley produced loan documentation that provided for a loan for a period of slightly in excess of two years, that the loan would be automatically renewed.
(3) The collateral contract was inconsistent with the contractual documentation signed by Mr Broomhead and no contemporaneous communication between him and the Bank referred to its terms.
(4) The First Claim was not issued until 2015 and, therefore, the disclosure exercise that took place in 2017 had to look back over 13 years.
(5) The trial of the First Claim before HH Judge Klein lasted 11 days and the judge handed down a comprehensive judgment running to 85 pages and 374 paragraphs. Mr Broomhead's evidence was rejected in its entirety.
(6) Mr Broomhead's subsequent application for permission to appeal was dismissed.
"An action to rescind/set aside the judgment dated 21st June 2018 on the grounds of fraud (Jonesco v Beard [1930] AC 2981). The Defendant was consciously dishonest in relation to evidence given and documents disclosed, that dishonesty is relevant to the judgment being impugned." [sic]
(1) The court can only be satisfied that the claim shows no reasonable grounds if it is bound to fail: Hughes v Colin Richards & Co [2004] EWCA Civ 266.
(2) The court should have in mind that the function of a statement of case is to set out the case only in sufficient detail to enable the other party properly to prepare an answer to it. McPhilemy v Times Newspapers [1999] 3 All ER 775 per Lord Woolf MR 792J - 793 A-B and Three Rivers DC v Bank of England [2001] UKHL 16 per Lord Hope at [49]-[50]. However, I note that Lord Hope goes on to say at [51]: "As a general rule, the more serious the allegation of misconduct, the greater the need for particulars to explain the allegation. This is especially so where the allegation that is being made is of bad faith or dishonesty."
(3) In relation to the application under CPR 24.2 the well-known principle derived from Royal Brompton Hospital HHS Trust v Hammond (No 5) [2001] EWCA Civ 550 that "… the court must take into account not only the evidence actually placed before it on the application for summary judgment, but also the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial."
(1) The allegations made by Mr Broomhead are of the utmost seriousness. He alleges that persons employed by, or acting as agent for the Bank (such as the Bank's solicitors), acted with conscious and knowing dishonesty in the conduct of the First Claim in relation to evidence given and documents disclosed.
(2) Other than Mr Mosley, Mr Broomhead does not name any employee of the Bank, or any other person, who is said to have acted dishonestly.
(3) It is right to record that at the first hearing of the Bank's application, Mr Roe QC, who then appeared for Mr Broomhead, expressly disavowed any suggestion that Hannah Summerfield, who as in-house counsel for the Bank signed the Disclosure Statements in the First Claim, had acted dishonestly. Mr Doyle QC did not seek to resile from this concession.
(4) The manner in which a claim that alleges dishonesty or fraud must be pleaded is not in doubt and both parties relied upon the summary at [20] in the judgment of Flaux J (as he then was) in JSC Bank of Moscow v Kekhman and others [2015] EWHC 3073 (Comm).
"The claimant does not have to plead primary facts which are only consistent with dishonesty. The correct test is whether or not, on the basis of the primary facts pleaded, an inference of dishonesty is more likely than one of innocence or negligence. As Lord Millett put it, there must be some fact "which tilts the balance and justifies an inference of dishonesty". At the interlocutory stage, when the court is considering whether a plea of fraud is a proper one and whether to strike it out, the court is not concerned with whether the evidence at trial will or will not establish fraud but only with whether the facts are pleaded which would justify the plea of fraud. If the plea is justified, then the court must go forward to trial and assessment of whether the evidence justifies the inference is a matter for the trial judge. …".
(5) It is well understood that a party alleging dishonesty may not be able to plead a claim with every particular because it will be necessary for the claimant to rely upon disclosure to flesh out the claim. That said, the minimum requirements, as they are expressed in Kekhman, must be met and if the claimant fails to meet this threshold, the claim is likely to be struck out. If the claim does not plead facts which justify a plea of fraud, there will be no basis upon which the claimant is entitled to obtain disclosure because there will be no issue or issues between the parties which may respond in disclosure.
(1) Communications between the Bank and Iron Mountain requesting the May 2004 back-up tapes and subsequent communications about the tapes having been lost.
(2) The Bank's internal records about the back-up tapes.
(3) Confirmation that the Bank have no back-up tapes other than those stored at Iron Mountain.
(4) Disclosure of the E-Flex system with metadata.
(5) Disclosure of the full RMP system.
(6) Clarification about why the CIN number on documents that have been disclosed is not consistent.
(7) Clarification about why the documents disclosed identify only one Loan Account Code.
"… a large number of cases involving allegations of systemic, fraudulent conduct by a number of UK banks, including the Defendants in this case (RBS and NatWest), Lloyds and HBOS. These cases have involved significant document tampering, including the forging of customer signatures, the fabrication of evidence in relation to legal proceedings and the giving of false statements by bank employees and their solicitors in Court".
"14. I understand from Mr Wright that the authenticity of the documents disclosed by the Defendants in this case is also disputed by current employees of the Defendants who have raised concerns at board level in RBS. I am told that the Defendants have, to date, refused to provide voluntary disclosure of the relevant systems that would prove conclusively the authenticity of such documents; I am not surprised by this approach however.
15. From my own experiences in office, and from the evidence which I have been privy to, I can say that the allegations made by Mr Broomhead, as supported by the evidence of Mr Wright, are consistent with other similar cases involving document fabrication and manipulation by banks.
16. The issues regarding the evidence in this case and the alleged endemic fabrication of documentary evidence at RBS are extremely serious and fit within a broader national context of UK banks fabricating evidence to win court cases against customers. The same context also applies at an international level where significant investigations in the US and Australia have made findings of a similar nature to those being highlighted here in the UK.
17. In my opinion, and having regard to my experience of similar circumstances, the Court should consider carefully the evidence relied upon by the Defendants in the trial and exercise great caution before forming a view as to Mr Broomhead's case. Consideration of the original documents (which I understand will need to be disclosed by the Defendants, though I am not clear why those documents have not been disclosed to date, particularly in relation to the trial of the original case) by the Court and by the parties would allow certainty. I understand that the Defendants have been asked to provide these voluntarily, but at the time I give this statement, have chosen not to do so. I find this concerning in the face of such serious allegations which would be easily addressed with this disclosure.
18. Mr Broomhead's allegations may appear, at least to the uninitiated, as speculative, if viewed through the traditional lens and perception that the banks have enjoyed as trustworthy, professional organisations where criminal activity and efforts to conceal criminal activities would simply not occur. From my experiences, Mr Broomhead's allegations are unremarkable. As a result of my own knowledge and experience I can confirm that the behaviour of the type described and complained of by Mr Broomhead in his case (and in the evidence of Mr Wright), does occur and has done so with the full knowledge and co-operation of senior executives within the relevant banks."
Disclosure
"(1) expressly state that the disclosing party believes the extent of the search to have been reasonable in all the circumstances, and
(2) in setting out the extent of the search (see rule 31.10(6)) draw attention to any particular limitations on the extent of the search which were adopted for proportionality reasons and give the reasons why the limitations were adopted, e.g. the difficulty or expense that a search not subject to those limitations would have entailed or the marginal relevance of categories of documents omitted from the search."
"6. Prior to the introduction of the Vault, the Bank stored its emails on Back-Up Tapes. The Bank's Back-Up Tapes recorded a monthly "snapshot" of every individual's email account. The Bank's Back-Up Tapes are stored in an off-site facility operated by Iron Mountain and accessible only by a process of manually identifying a potential relevant Back-Up Tape and restoring its data. That is a time-consuming and labour-intensive process. Notwithstanding this, the Bank has attempted to restore the back-up tapes containing the emails belonging to Mr Mosley for the period April, May and June 2004. Whilst Iron Mountain was able to identify the relevant back-up tapes for Mr Mosley for the period April and June 2004, no back-up tapes were located for May 2004." [sic]
"11.3 … But otherwise, the back-up captures the deleted items still within the mailbox, draft emails, and received and sent items. Because a back-up point effectively takes a snapshot of a user's entire mailbox at a single point of time, a back-up for a particular month will contain all emails in the mailbox as at that date and stretching back in time to the earliest dated email – again, provided the user has not permanently deleted emails."
The Revised Claim
(1) The summary of what is said to be Mr Mosley's case in paragraph 6 is not accurate. This is clear from (in particular) paragraph [86] of His Honour Judge Klein's judgment.
(2) At paragraph 8 it is stated that "a few weeks before trial" (in fact 6 weeks) the Bank provided further disclosure that showed expiry dates for Mr Broomhead's facilities of March 2020, some 16 years after the promises that are relied upon. In fact, documents showing this date had been disclosed in November 2017 with the original disclosure. It is correct that additional documents bearing the date in March 2020 were disclosed in the final tranche of disclosure closer to trial.
(3) In paragraph 12, the claimant pleads that:
"… by reason of post-trial discoveries and revelations he will be able to show in this action that the Defendants were guilty of conscious dishonesty in the presentation and pursuit of the Defence and in any event at this stage the primary facts below make the inference of dishonesty more likely than one of innocence or negligence …".
This is consistent with the claim form and makes it clear that the case is based upon conscious dishonesty in the presentation and pursuit of the First Claim. In any event, if there was, as Mr Broomhead alleges in his evidence, manipulation of documents before 2015 when the first claim was issued, it would only be relevant if the manipulation was known to those who had conduct of the claim. It is not said, for example, that Mr Mosley was involved in any document manipulation or was aware of it.
Paragraph 14
Paragraph 15
(1) The failure to locate the May 2004 tape is suspicious in light of the location of tapes the April and June tapes.
(2) Iron Mountain, which stored back-up tapes have a highly effective professional document storage system.
(3) It is said to be "virtually certain" the bank would have a disaster recovery plan in place which would include reliance on copy data held securely by a professional third party.
Paragraph 16
"… a key tool for the relationship management team to communicate with the credit documents team".
Paragraphs 17 – 19
Paragraph 20
Paragraph 21
"… the Defendants concealed the existence of REMIT, as it would reveal that the Defendants intended to try to force him into agreeing to a PPA by keeping his accounts in default by not renewing the facilities, seeking large capital repayments and by charging penalty interest and management charges ie the motivation to acquire the property prevailed over the bank continuing to act in accordance with the Mosley promises/collateral contract."
"… makes it inherently more likely that the Defendants would be motivated to ensure that disclosure was managed so as to ensure that documents supporting the Claimant's case were either not disclosed or were manipulated by redaction or alteration."
"Manipulation of the documents is the only apparent explanation for this anomaly."
"'Material' means that the fresh evidence that is adduced after the first judgment has been given is such that it demonstrates that the previous relevant evidence, action, statement or concealment was an operative cause of the court's decision to give judgment in the way it did. Put another way, it must be shown that the fresh evidence would have entirely changed the way in which the first court approached and came to its decision. Thus, the relevant conscious and deliberate dishonesty must be causative of the impugned judgment being obtained in the terms it was."
Conclusion