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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Sotheby's v Mark Weiss Ltd & Ors [2018] EWHC 3179 (Comm) (26 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2018/3179.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 3179 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Sotheby's |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Mark Weiss Limited (2) Fairlight Art Ventures LLP (3) Mark Adrian F. Weiss |
Defendant |
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Tom Ford (instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP) for the First and Third Defendants
Richard Wilson QC and Shyam Thakerar (instructed by Mackrell Turner Garrett) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 24 October and 14 November 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Teare :
Introduction
Litigation privilege
11. The legal requirements of a claim to litigation privilege may be summarised as follows:
(1) The burden of proof is on the party claiming privilege to establish it – see, for example, West London Pipeline and Storage v Total UK [2008] 2 CLC 258 at [50].
(2) An assertion of privilege and a statement of the purpose of the communication over which privilege is claimed in a witness statement are not determinative and are evidence of a fact which may require to be independently proved. The court will scrutinise carefully how the claim to privilege is made out and the witness statements should be as specific as possible – see, for example, Sumitomo Corporation v Credit Lyonnais Rouse Ltd (14 February 2001) at [30] and [39] (Andrew Smith J); West London Pipeline and Storage Ltd v Total UK Ltd [2008] EWHC 1729 (Comm) at [52], [53], [86] (Beatson J); Tchenguiz v Director of the SFO [2013] EWHC 2297 (QB) at [52] (Eder J).
(3) The party claiming privilege must establish that litigation was reasonably contemplated or anticipated. It is not sufficient to show that there is a mere possibility of litigation, or that there was a distinct possibility that someone might at some stage bring proceedings, or a general apprehension of future litigation – see, for example, United States of America v Philip Morris Inc [2004] EWCA Civ 330 at [68]; Westminster International v Dornoch Ltd [2009] EWCA Civ 1323 at paras [19] – [20]. As Eder J stated in Tchenguiz at [48(iii)]: "Where litigation has not been commenced at the time of the communication, it has to be 'reasonably in prospect'; this does not require the prospect of litigation to be greater than 50% but it must be more than a mere possibility".
(4) It is not enough for a party to show that proceedings were reasonably anticipated or in contemplation; the party must also show that the relevant communications were for the dominant purpose of either (i) enabling legal advice to be sought or given, and/or (ii) seeking or obtaining evidence or information to be used in or in connection with such anticipated or contemplated proceedings. Where communications may have taken place for a number of purposes, it is incumbent on the party claiming privilege to establish that the dominant purpose was litigation. If there is another purpose, this test will not be satisfied: Price Waterhouse (a firm) v BCCI Holdings (Luxembourg) SA [1992] BCLC 583, 589-590 (cited in Tchenguiz at [54]-[55]); West London Pipeline and Storage Ltd v Total UK Ltd at [52].
12. In relation to the Court's approach to the assessment of evidence in support of a claim for privilege, it has been stated that it is necessary to subject the evidence to "anxious scrutiny" in particular because of the difficulties in going behind that evidence" – per Eder J in Tchenguiz at [52]. "The Court will look at 'purpose' from an objective standpoint, looking at all relevant evidence including evidence of subjective purpose" – ibid. 48(iv). Further, as Beatson J pointed out in the West London Pipeline case at [53], it is desirable that the party claiming such privilege "should refer to such contemporary material as it is possible to do without making disclosure of the very matters that the claim for privilege is designed to protect".
13. As was further stated by Beatson J in the West London Pipeline case at [86]:
"(3) It is, however, difficult to go behind an affidavit of documents at an interlocutory stage of proceedings. The affidavit is conclusive unless it is reasonably certain from:
(a) the statements of the party making it that he has erroneously represented or has misconceived the character of the documents in respect of which privilege is claimed: Frankenstein v Gavin's House to House Cycle Cleaning and Insurance Co, per Lord Esher MR and Chitty LJ; Lask v Gloucester Health Authority.(b) the evidence of the person who or entity which directed the creation of the communications or documents over which privilege is claimed that the affidavit is incorrect: Neilson v Laugharane (the Chief Constable's letter), Lask v Gloucester HA (the NHS Circular), and see Frankenstein v Gavin's House to House Cycle Cleaning and Insurance Co, per A L Smith LJ.(c) the other evidence before the court that the affidavit is incorrect or incomplete on the material points: Jones v Montivedeo Gas Co; Birmingham and Midland Motor Omnibus Co v London and North West Railway Co; National Westminster Bank plc v Rabobank Nederland.
(4) Where the court is not satisfied on the basis of the affidavit and the other evidence before it that the right to withhold inspection is established, there are four options open to it:
(a) It may conclude that the evidence does not establish a legal right to withhold inspection and order inspection: Neilson v Laugharane; Lask v Gloucester Health Authority.(b) It may order a further affidavit to deal with matters which the earlier affidavit does not cover or on which it is unsatisfactory: Birmingham and Midland Motor Omnibus Co Ltd v London and North West Railway Co; National Westminster Bank plc v Rabobank Nederland.(c) It may inspect the documents: see CPR 31.19(6) and the discussion in National Westminster Bank plc v Rabo Bank Nederland and Atos Consulting Ltd v Avis plc (No. 2). Inspection should be a solution of last resort, in part because of the danger of looking at documents out of context at the interlocutory stage. It should not be undertaken unless there is credible evidence that those claiming privilege have either misunderstood their duty, or are not to be trusted with the decision making, or there is no reasonably practical alternative.(d) At an interlocutory stage a court may, in certain circumstances, order cross-examination of a person who has sworn an affidavit, for example, an affidavit sworn as a result of the order of the court that a defendant to a freezing injunction should disclose his assets: (House of Spring Gardens Ltd v Wait; Yukong Lines v Rensburg; Motorola Credit Corp v Uzan (No. 2)). However, the weight of authority is that cross-examination may not be ordered in the case of an affidavit of documents: Frankenstein's case; Birmingham and Midland Motor Omnibus Co Ltd v London and North Western Railway Co and Fayed v Lonrho. In cases where the issue is whether the documents exist (as it was in Frankenstein's case and Fayed v Lonrho) the existence of the documents is likely to be an issue at the trial and there is a particular risk of a court at an interlocutory stage impinging on that issue."
"It appears to me that unless the purpose of submission to the legal adviser in view of litigation is at least the dominant purpose for which the relevant document was prepared, the reasons which require privilege to be extended to it cannot apply."
"The exercise of determining dominant purpose in each case is a determination of fact, and that the court must take a realistic, indeed commercial, view of the facts."
Sotheby's dealings with Mr. Martin
"All correspondence between you and Sotheby's relating to this matter is in the context of that anticipated litigation, to enable Sotheby's to understand the strengths and weaknesses of its position and to make the right legal and commercial decisions in anticipation of that potential litigation. Such correspondence is privileged against disclosure in that litigation if it occurs."
Sotheby's claim to privilege
"(1) However, following Mr. Martin providing his view that the Property was a counterfeit, Mr. Martin was instructed to produce a formal, detailed report. (2) The draft of that report, and the communications between Freshfields, internal Sotheby's counsel and Mr. Martin in respect of that report, are privileged, since that report was being developed at a time when litigation was in prospect and for the dominant purpose of being deployed in that litigation (or potentially settling that litigation). (3) It is wrong to suggest that the preparation of this formal report was done by Sotheby's with the purpose of fulfilling some contractual obligation. (4) All the way through the preparation of the report, the fact that the matter was likely to end up in court (if the report could not be used to persuade the other side to settle) was the perspective from which the report was being prepared by all parties, and was the very reason why Freshfields had been engaged and that Sotheby's was spending resource on Freshfields' litigation advice. (5) Freshfields were advising on the report, and on its role in the forthcoming decision as to whether to rescind (which would almost inevitably result in proceedings being issued), from the perspective of how it would be used as evidence in the litigation. (6) I understand from Sotheby's that had litigation not been contemplated, then findings from Mr. Martin would have been sought, but no detailed written report of this kind would have been embarked upon and Freshfields would not have been engaged to undertake this exercise with Mr. Martin."
"Aside from the production of the report, Mr. Martin had a separate role in this litigation, of advising and assisting Sotheby's and Freshfields in the presentation of Sotheby's case to the Defendants, to Stephenson Harwood and to the experts appointed by the First and Third Defendants…. Mr. Martin's communications in that role are very clearly privileged as they are all either: (i) from a time at which litigation was reasonably in prospect and for the dominant purpose of the conduct of litigation; or (ii) communications for the purpose of settling and/or narrowing the dispute between Sotheby's and the Defendants."
"Although a reputable company will wish to ensue high ethical standards in the conduct of it business for its own sake, it is undeniable that the "stick" used to enforce appropriate standards is the criminal law and, in some measure, the civil law also. Thus, where there is a clear threat of a criminal investigation, even at one remove from the specific risks posed by the SFO should it start an investigation, the reason for the investigation of whilstle-blower allegations must be brought into the zone where the dominant purpose may be to prevent or deal with litigation."
The correspondence with Mr. Twilley
"1.4 To ensure that it has a proper basis for exercising its discretion to rescind the Seller's contract, if necessary, and that this position is robust in any litigation, Sotheby's would like to have Mr. Martin's analysis subjected to a peer review."
"3.2 Your role is not argue for or against the Painting's authenticity but to reach your own independent view on the quality and reliability of Mr. Martin's work, any flaws that you may identify, any particular challenges that could be made to it and, hence, as to how robust his conclusions, whatever they may be, are."
"24. Mr. Twilley was engaged on 13 May 2016, at a time when, as I have explained, litigation was in contemplation: both sides had appointed external litigation counsel and were preparing rival reports. The peer review by Mr. Twilley was commissioned in order to strengthen Sotheby's case before a Court or to increase the prospects of settlement. Had this litigation not been contemplated, the Twilley review would never have been commissioned.
25. The dominant, indeed the sole, purpose of Mr. Twilley's engagement and all of the Legal teams' communications with him was therefore the contemplated litigation between Sotheby's and the defendants. Accordingly, Mr. Twilley's review, and the correspondence between him and the Legal Team in relation to it, is protected by litigation privilege.
"4.2 All correspondence and all preparatory papers for your advice will be legally privileged, as they are being prepared in contemplation of litigation…"
Conclusion