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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Edwards v Golding & Ors [2006] EWHC 1684 (QB) (12 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2006/1684.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1684 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Stephen Edwards |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Paul Golding |
First Defendant |
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Simon Darby |
Second Defendant |
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Nicholas Griffin |
Third Defendant |
____________________
David Price (of David Price Solicitors and Advocates) for the Third Defendant
Hearing date: Friday 30th June 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
"A tiny group of ultra-Conservatives are hoping to split the BNP vote in several key wards in the West Midlands in this May's council elections. A known player in this attempt to thwart a BNP pro-white electoral breakthrough is Steve Edwards.
Mr Edwards was briefly BNP Regional organiser in the area, before leaving in a huff after being disciplined for causing internal disruption in a failed attempt by a shadowy Tory group to take over the party.
Mr Edwards has gone even further in his renunciation of his working class roots by describing his so-called "Freedom Party" (aptly nicknamed the Three - of - Em Party) as "middle class and respectable".
He is believed to be planning to stand in Tipton Green, despite the fact that he is not legally entitled to do so, having turned his back on Tipton years ago to move to a £170,000 yuppie house in the posh village of Wombourne, in the leafy Staffordshire countryside".
THE ORDER JOINING MR GRIFFIN AS THIRD DEFENDANT
2) Until 6th July 2005, when I saw Mr Griffin's statement, I did not know that he was the author of the anonymous article pleaded at paragraph 4 of the Particulars of Claim herein. I had suspected that the First Defendant was the anonymous author.
3) I accordingly ask the court to give me permission to join Mr Griffin as a Defendant, to amend the claim form and the Particulars of Claim and (if necessary) to exercise its discretion under Section 32A of the Limitation Act 1980 to disallow the limitation period, given the anonymous nature of the publication. I accept that this publication cannot be dealt with on 12th July 2005 since Mr Griffin is entitled to proper notice of it. "
"The purpose of this letter is to notify your client:
a) That I strongly oppose the application (although I believe this will already have been anticipated by your client and you and your counsel). This is because I believe your client knew full well from the outset that I was the author of the alleged defamatory article or at least could very easily have found this out or had this confirmed at the time. Accordingly your client's claim against me is statute barred, the one year time limit having expired in 2003.
b) I therefore require the issue of whether I am joined to be dealt with at a separate hearing for which I have been given adequate opportunity to prepare and be represented."
The letter went on to complain of the fact that Mr Davies was representing the Claimant and that the application was abuse of the court procedure. He asked for an adjournment, which the Claimant refused to agree to.
"19.5 (1) This rule applies to a change of parties after the end of a period of limitation under
(a) the Limitation Act 1980(1); ...
(2) The court may add or substitute a party only if
(a) the relevant limitation period was current when the proceedings were started; and
(b) the addition or substitution is necessary. ...
(4) In addition, in a claim for personal injuries the court may add or substitute a party where it directs that
(a) (i) section 11 (special time limit for claims for personal injuries); or
(ii) section 12 (special time limit for claims under fatal accidents legislation), of the Limitation Act 1980 shall not apply to the claim by or against the new party; or
(b) the issue of whether those sections apply shall be determined at trial.
(Rule 17.4 deals with other changes after the end of a relevant limitation period)"
"10. Section 4A of the Limitation Act 1980 provides that no action for (inter alia) libel shall be brought after the expiration of one year from the date on which the cause of action accrued.
11. C does not know the precise date on which the words complained of were published, but it is clear that publication was in the month of March 2002.
12. The first question for consideration is whether the cause of action against Mr Griffin accrued at that time, bearing in mind that the publication was anonymous, and wrongly believed by C to have been the work of [the First Defendant]
13. A cause of action accrues when a Claimant knows the facts that he "has to prove to establish a prima facie case" (per Neill LJ in C v. Mirror Group Newspapers [1997] 1WLR131 at 138H.
14. It is submitted that one of these facts is the identity of the party to be sued; CPR 7 PD 4.1(3): "the claim form and every other statement of case must be headed with the title of the proceedings, the title should state: .. (3) the full name of each party".
SETTING ASIDE A DEFAULT JUDGMENT AND THE JOINDER OF A DEFENDANT
"13.3 (1) In any other case, the court may set aside or vary a judgment entered under Part 12 if
(a) the defendant has a real prospect of successfully defending the claim; or
(b) it appears to the court that there is some other good reason why
(i) the judgment should be set aside or varied; or
(ii) the defendant should be allowed to defend the claim.
(2) In considering whether to set aside or vary a judgment entered under Part 12, the matters to which the court must have regard include whether the person seeking to set aside the judgment made an application to do so promptly."
"3.1(7) A power of the court under these Rules to make an order includes a power to vary or revoke the order.
19.2 (3) The court may order any person to cease to be a party if it is not desirable for that person to be a party to the proceedings".
WHETHER THE LIMITATION PERIOD HAD EXPIRED
THE APPLICATION OF CPR PART 19.5
SETTING ASIDE JOINDER UNDER CPR 3.1(7)
"39 CPR 3.1(7) gives a very general power to vary or revoke an order. Consideration was given to the circumstances in which that power might be used by Patten J in Lloyds Investment (Scandinavia) Limited v Christen Ager-Hanssen [2003] EWHC 1740 (Ch). He said at paragraph 7:-
"The Deputy Judge exercised a discretion under CPR 13.3. It is not open to me as a judge exercising a parallel jurisdiction in the same division of the High Court to entertain what would in effect be an appeal from that order. If the Defendant wished to challenge whether the order made by Mr Berry was disproportionate and wrong in principle, then he should have applied for permission to appeal to the Court of Appeal. I have been given no real reasons why this was not done. That course remains open to him even today, although he will have to persuade the Court of Appeal of the reasons why he should have what, on any view, is a very considerable extension of time. It seems to me that the only power available to me on this application is that contained in CPR 3.1(7), which enables the Court to vary or revoke an order. This is not confined to purely procedural orders and there is no real guidance in the White Book as to the possible limits of the jurisdiction. Although this is not intended to be an exhaustive definition of the circumstances in which the power under CPR 3.1 (7) is exercisable, it seems to me that, for the High Court to revisit one of its earlier orders, the Applicant must either show some material change of circumstances or that the judge who made the earlier order was misled in some way, whether innocently or otherwise, as to the correct factual position before him. The latter type of case would include, for example, a case of material non-disclosure on an application for an injunction. If all that is sought is a reconsideration of the order on the basis of the same material, then that can only be done, in my judgment, in the context of an appeal. Similarly it is not, I think, open to a party to the earlier application to seek in effect to re-argue that application by relying on submissions and evidence which were available to him at the time of the earlier hearing, but which, for whatever reason, he or his legal representatives chose not to employ. It is therefore clear that I am not entitled to entertain this application on the basis of the Defendant's first main submission, that Mr Berry's order was in any event disproportionate and wrong in principle, although I am bound to say that I have some reservations as to whether he was right to impose a condition of this kind without in terms enquiring whether the Defendant had any realistic prospects of being able to comply with the condition."
40. We endorse that approach. We agree that the power given by CPR 3.1(7) cannot be used simply as an equivalent to an appeal against an order with which the applicant is dissatisfied. The circumstances outlined by Patten J are the only ones in which the power to revoke or vary an order already made should be exercised under 3.1(7). "
"119. The possibility of recourse to CPR 3.1(7) remains to be considered. As we have said earlier, this rule gives a very general power to vary or revoke an order. It appears to be unfettered. But it is a wrong exercise of this power to vary or revoke an order where there has been no material change of circumstances since the earlier order was made and/or no material is brought to the attention of the second court which was not brought to the attention of the first. A party who unsuccessfully deploys all his material before a court should not be allowed to have a second bite of the cherry merely because he failed to succeed on the first occasion. We refer to paras 39 and 40 above and our approval of the observations of Patten J in Lloyd's Investment (Scandinavia) Limited's case. Mr Sharp submits that the mere fact that an application is refused without a hearing is a sufficient reason for requiring CPR 3.1(7) to be construed as enabling a court to vary or revoke an order even where no new material is deployed by the applicant. He says that any other interpretation is inconsistent with article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights. We disagree. The existence of the right of appeal adequately protects an applicant's article 6 rights. Moreover, if an applicant reasonably considers that an oral hearing is necessary to explain the point properly, the court will usually accommodate a request for a hearing. At para 38 above, we warn of the dangers of making an application for the grant of an extension of time for the service of a claim form without a hearing.
120. In short, therefore, the jurisdiction to vary or revoke an order under CPR 3.1(7) should not normally be exercised unless the applicant is able to place material before the court, whether in the form of evidence or argument, which was not placed before the court on the earlier occasion." (emphasis added)
SETTING ASIDE JOINDER UNDER CPR 19.1(3)
DELAY
"The dictionary meaning of "promptly" is "with alacrity". I have grave doubts as to whether Mr Carnall acted with the requisite degree of alacrity, but in view of my conclusion on other matters I need not decide this point".
"However broadly the concept of promptness might have to be regarded, for instance in a case where the appellant has an excellent case on appeal, in my judgement Mr Carnall here on any view failed to act promptly. He took another twenty six or so days to make his application".
"44. But I wish to touch briefly on the question of promptness. As is pointed out in the footnote 39.3.7 to the Spring 2000 Civil Procedure White Book:
"Note that the wording of r.29.3 (5) provides more stringent requirements than CCR O.37 r.2 which it replaces. The court no longer has a broad discretion. There is only jurisdiction to set aside a regular judgment if the party seeking to have the order set aside can satisfy all three requirements in r.39.3(5)."
45. This consideration must, I think, inform the court's approach to the construction of the word "promptly" in precondition (a). At first blush it might be thought that any inappropriate delay whatever on the part of an applicant would require that he be found not to have acted promptly. Yet such a construction would carry with it the Draconian consequence that, even if he had a good, perhaps compelling, reason for not having attended the trial, and a reasonable - perhaps, indeed, excellent - prospect of success at trial, the court would still be bound to refuse him a fresh trial. I would accordingly construe "promptly" here to require, not that an applicant has been guilty of no needless delay whatever, but rather that he has acted with all reasonable celerity in the circumstances. That said, I too would regard the appellant here as having failed even in that obligation. 30 days was altogether too long a delay before making this Part 39 application. Having regard to the long, and generally unsatisfactory, history of the proceedings to that point, the application plainly could, and in my judgment reasonably should, have been issued well before it was."
"39.3 (1) The court may proceed with a trial in the absence of a party but
(a) if no party attends the trial, it may strike out (GL) the whole of the proceedings;
(b) if the claimant does not attend, it may strike out his claim and any defence to counterclaim; and
(c) if a defendant does not attend, it may strike out his defence or counterclaim (or both).
(2) Where the court strikes out proceedings, or any part of them, under this rule, it may subsequently restore the proceedings, or that part.
(3) Where a party does not attend and the court gives judgment or makes an order against him, the party who failed to attend may apply for the judgment or order to be set aside (GL) .
(4) An application under paragraph (2) or paragraph (3) must be supported by evidence.
(5) Where an application is made under paragraph (2) or (3) by a party who failed to attend the trial, the court may grant the application only if the applicant
(a) acted promptly when he found out that the court had exercised its power to strike out or to enter judgment or make an order against him;
(b) had a good reason for not attending the trial; and
(c) has a reasonable prospect of success at the trial."
"2. Passage of time alone
It does not seem to me right that the passage of time alone should preclude a defendant having a judgment in default set aside. There are examples in the authorities of judgments being set aside after relatively long periods, e.g. Oilike Ltd v Reid (unreported C.A. 1 September 1986). In that case the Court of Appeal held that the defendant had shown two lines of defence on the merits, and despite not being inclined to accept the defendant's explanations about being unaware of the proceedings, and despite a delay of 5 years, set aside the default judgment. Thus a submission that 7 years is just too long without more is not one I am prepared to accept.
4. Attitude of the court once defence shown
The authorities to which we were referred demonstrated that if the court concluded that there was a defence on the merits which carried some degree of conviction, it is the very strong inclination of the court to allow a default judgment to be set aside even if strong criticism could be made of the defendant's conduct. Indeed, Mr Hirst's and his junior's researches had not discovered an authority where if that was the view of the court, the court nevertheless refused to set aside the judgment. Perhaps the most striking illustrations which demonstrate the attitude of the courts are the unreported decision of the Court of Appeal in Vann v Awford (18 April 1986), and a further decision of the Court of Appeal in The Saudi Eagle (supra) in which Vann v Awford was followed and applied ."
SETTING ASIDE THE DEFAULT JUDGMENT
OTHER POINTS RELIED ON
THE DEFENCES OTHER THAN LIMITATION
"In my judgment it is particularly important in an action of this type that both sides should if at all possible be allowed to deploy their case as they wish. The plaintiff seeks to vindicate his reputation. It would be a poor form of vindication if it were only obtained by half muzzling the other side".
"The Claimant was planning to stand in the Tipton Green ward despite not being legally entitled to because he resided in Wombourne".
"This was not a genuine address as the Claimant had left the property in or about 1995 to reside in Wombourne and accordingly the Claimant was not entitled to stand in the Tipton Green ward".
CONCLUSION