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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Kesabo & Ors v African Barrick Gold Plc & Anor [2013] EWHC 3198 (QB) (23 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/3198.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3198 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Magige Ghati Kesabo and 11 others |
Claimants |
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and |
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(1) African Barrick Gold Plc (2) North Mara Gold Mine Ltd |
Defendants |
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Charles Gibson QC and Andrew Kinnier (instructed by Quinn Emanuel Urquhart and Sullivan UK LLP) for the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Simon:
Introduction
The Claimants claim in their own capacity in respect of injuries personally sustained and/or as the administrators of the estates of deceased individuals and/or as dependants of deceased individuals. The claims brought by the Claimants all pertain to injuries or deaths that occurred in or around the North Mara gold mine in Tanzania since 2010 as a result of the use of unlawful and/or excessive force by private security agents and/or police at the mine. The mine is operated under licence held by [NMGML]. At all material times, [NMGML] and the mine were under the control of [ABG]. The injuries and/or death were caused by the:
(a) acts and/or omissions of the Defendants; and/or
(b) acts and/or omissions of private security agents and/or police for which the Defendants are vicariously liable, and/or in whose acts or omissions the Defendants conspired; and
for which the Defendants are liable in negligence, trespass to the person, conspiracy and/or occupiers and/or equivalent wrongs in law in circumstances in which the law of another country is held to apply to the determination of the substantive issues between the parties.
The Claimants have suffered physical injury and/or consequential losses (including the cost of voluntary nursing care), for which they claim damages and interest pursuant to s.35A of the Senior Court Act 1981.
The first issue
Particulars of claim must be served on the defendant no later than the latest time for serving the claim form.
(Rule 7.5 sets out the latest time for serving the claim form)
Where the claim form is served within the jurisdiction, the claimant must complete the step required by the following table in relation to the particular method of service chosen, before 12.00 midnight on the calendar day four months after the date of issue of the claim form.
Where the claimant does not include the particulars of claim in the claim form, particulars of claim may be served separately:
...
(2) within 14 days after the service of the claim form provided that the service of the particulars of claim is not later than 4 months from the date of issue of the claim form ...
see also §4.2.1 of the Queen's Bench Guide, which is to similar effect.
A claim form served within the United Kingdom in accordance with this Part is deemed to be served on the second business day after completion of the relevant step under rule 7.5(1)
It is important to notice that the question whether there has been compliance with the time limit fixed by r.7.5 for service of a claim form within the jurisdiction (or in Scotland and Northern Ireland) is determined, not by inquiring as to whether the deemed day for service fell within the period, or whether personal service was effected within it (as was the case before October 1, 2008), but by asking whether the 'step required' was 'completed' within the period. Consequently, the problems encountered under the former rule, and dealt with by the Court of Appeal in cases such as Godwin v Swindon BC [2001] EWCA Civ 1478; [2002] 1 WLR 997, CA, and Anderton v Clwyd CC (No.2) [2002] 1 WLR 3174, CA, are avoided.
The Second Issue
The history of the litigation up to 30 July 2013
ABG will not allow itself, through a group action instigated under questionable circumstances, to be drawn into compensating individuals who recklessly and illegally trespassed on the mine, stole NMGML property and, in a number of cases, violently attacked mine personnel as well as officers of the Tanzanian Police Force.
It is obviously sensible for you to supply us with documents in your possession (including for example the video footage that appears to exist) and which you have considered in refuting our clients' allegations. Such evidence might, for instance, demonstrate the correctness of your clients' claims or some of them, or their unfoundedness (sic).
In the light of ... the fact that: (a) your clients are now clearly in a position to plead their claims (if, which is not accepted, they were not already able to do so prior to the provision of the most recent documentation); (b) there is now no impediment to your clients serving their claim form and getting on with these proceedings; and (c) there is no common ground in terms of settlement, our clients are not prepared to provide any further disclosure pending the service of your clients' claim form and particulars of claim, which as you are aware, are required to be served with an appropriate statement of truth for each of the Claimants
The history of the litigation from 30 July to date
Particulars of claim are intended to define the claim being made. They are a formal document prepared for the purposes of legal proceedings and can be expected to identify with care and precision the case the claimant is putting forward. They must set out the essential allegations of fact on which the claimant relies and which he will seek to prove at trial, but they should also state the nature of the case that is to be made in order to inform the defendant and the court of the basis on which it is said that the facts give rise to the remedy being claimed.
1. These Particulars of Claim are pleaded in skeletal form only. They are served to ensure compliance with CPR 7.4 and in the light of the Defendants (sic) refusal to consent to an extension of time. In these circumstances the Claimants intend to serve an Amended Particulars of Claim in substitution for this document and it is accordingly averred that it would be disproportionate for Defences to be filed in the interim.
...
16. As set out in paragraph 1 above, a fully particularised claim will be served in due course. Such particulars will be pleaded once adequate disclosure has been made and/or once the Claimants have had an opportunity to review and provide instructions to their UK lawyers on recent disclosure made by [the Defendants] including video footage of incidents on 16 May and 14 July, which was disclosed on 11 July 2013. Insofar as necessary to do so, the Claimants rely further on facts and matters set out in correspondence dated 12 January 2012 and 21 December 2012.
6. At all material times, ABG/NMGML employed and/or contracted mine security personnel and used Tanzanian police as a common adjunct to and integral part of the Mine's security, and exercised and/or was able to exercise control and/or significant influence over the conduct of the same.
7. The Claimants are persons who have suffered injuries at the mine between July 2010 and May 2012 or they claim for and on behalf of the dependents and/or the estates of persons who have been killed at the mine between those dates. A Schedule of claimants, the injuries to which the claims relate and the dates of the same [are] attached as 'Schedule A'. A Schedule of claimants, the fatalities to which the claims related and the dates of the same is attached as 'Schedule B'.
Schedules of loss will be supplied together with or following the provision of further particulars, and in accordance with directions given by the Court.
In the light of the above, [each Defendant] owed a duty to [Artisanal and Small Scale Miners] and people in the vicinity of the mine, including the Claimants' deceased relatives, to take reasonable steps:
1. to avoid such individuals suffering harm as a result of the unreasonable and/or excessive use of force by police and/or mine security personnel; and
2. to ensure that adequate and competent medical treatment was administered, whether on the mine or elsewhere, for injuries sustained by such persons.
The fatalities and injuries suffered by the Claimants and those whom they represent were caused by breaches of duties owed to the victim by reason of [the Defendants'] ownership and/or occupation and/or operation of the mine site specifically in relation to the provision of security and/or in common law negligence and/or conspiracy and/or trespass to the person and/or common law design and/or vicarious liability for the acts.
14.4 failing to take steps that were reasonable available that would have avoided situations in which police and/or mine security personnel used unreasonable and/or excessive force against local people and the risks associated therewith;.
...
14.10 failing to provide adequate medical treatment and/or make adequate arrangements for transportation of injured persons to locations where such treatment could be administered; and/or
14.11 expressly or impliedly endorsing and/or instigating and/or facilitating and/or directing the conduct of police and mine security personnel in circumstances where the police and/or mine security personnel used unreasonable and/or excessive force against the Claimants or the deceased in relation to which the Claimants claim.
Other facts and events occurring from 2006 to 2013 are relied upon as similar fact evidence in support of the Claimants' contention that the harm sustained by the Claimant and/or deceased in relation to which they claim was part of an on-going pattern of conduct in which [Artisanal and Small Scale Miners] or persons in the vicinity of the Mine were injured and/or killed by police and/or mine security personnel as a result of deficiencies in the security arrangements, policies, practices and procedures of the Mine, for which [the Defendants] are responsible.
This paragraph is both inadequately particularised and impossible to respond to, as was recognised in §16.
... taking steps to frustrate claims being brought in the UK, following the incidents in question, as well as [their] conduct of this litigation including [their] failure to provide documents and failure to provide any apology.
It is sufficient to observe that the jurisprudential basis for this plea is not self-evident.
My initial review gives rise to real and substantial concerns as to the approach taken by the mine authorities and police to the situation on 16 May 2011 and the appropriateness of force used.
A declaratory decree that, as a matter of Tanzanian law, a private person, and in particular [NMGML], cannot be held liable for the actions and/or omissions of the Tanzanian Police Force acting in discharge of its duties whose code of conduct is regulated by the Police Force and Auxiliary Services Act, Cap.322.
The approach to the application for relief against sanctions
Except where these Rules provide otherwise, the court may,
(a) extend or shorten the time for compliance with any rule ... (even if than application and extension is made after the time for compliance has expired);
(1) On an application for relief from any sanction imposed for a failure to comply with any rule, practice direction or court order, the court will consider all the circumstances of the case, so as to enable it to deal justly with the application, including the need –
(a) for litigation to be conducted efficiently and at proportionate cost; and
(b) to enforce compliance with rules, practice directions and orders.
27. The tougher, more robust approach to rule-compliance and relief from sanctions is intended to ensure that justice can be done in the majority of cases. This requires an acknowledgement that the achievement of justice means something different now. Parties can no longer expect indulgence if they fail to comply with their procedural obligations. Those obligations not only serve the purpose of ensuring that they conduct the litigation proportionately in order to ensure their own costs are kept within proportionate bounds. But more importantly they serve the wider public interest of ensuring that other litigants can obtain justice efficiently and proportionately, and that the Court enables them to do so.
… courts at all levels have become too tolerant of delays and non-compliance with orders. In so doing they have lost sight of the damage which the culture of delay and non-compliance is inflicting on the civil justice system. The balance therefore needs to be redressed.
At [3] and [4] of his judgment Jackson LJ stated,
[3] ... There is a concern that relief against sanctions is being granted too readily at the present time. Such a culture of delay and non-compliance is injurious to the civil justice system and to litigants generally. The Rule Committee has recently approved a proposal that the present rule 3.9(1) be deleted and the [the new version of rule 3.9] be substituted:
[4] It is currently anticipated that this revised rule will come into force on 1 April 2013. After that date litigants who substantially disregard court orders or the requirements of the Civil Procedure Rules will receive significantly less indulgence than hitherto.
Conclusion