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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 >> GG v YY & Anor [2014] EWHC 1627 (QB) (20 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/1627.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1627 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GG |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) YY (2) ZZ |
Defendants |
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The Defendants appeared in person
Hearing dates: 13 May 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
i) one issued by the Second Defendant dated 13 December 2013 by which he asks for orders that (1) the claim be struck out, (2) an order dated 22 January 2011 and any subsequent amendments or undertakings be set aside (3) the Claimant be ordered to pay to him damages to be assessed under his cross-undertaking given to obtain the order dated 22 January and subsequent orders; (4) damages to be assessed in respect of further claims made by the Claimant which had already been resolved by agreement between the parties on 10 February 2011;ii) one issued by the First Defendant dated 3 February 2014 by which she asks for orders that (1) the claim be struck out (2) the orders of 22 January and 11 February be set aside (3) the Claimant be ordered to pay to him damages to be assessed under his cross-undertaking given to obtain the order dated 22 January and subsequent orders;
iii) one issued by the Claimant dated 18 March 2014 by which he asks for orders that (1) Defendants file proper replies to his Part 18 request dated 25 February 2014 (2) an order approved by Master Eastman on 27 February 2014 be drawn up (3) an injunction restraining the Defendants from disclosing to any non-party any witness statements (including their own) filed or served in these proceedings, or using the same for a different purpose (4) the witness statements of the Second Defendant and Second Defendant's wife dated 14 March 2014 be struck out.
"that there was a good case the extremely personal nature of these allegations, the way in which they have been written, the people to whom they have been reported and the persistence with which this course of conduct has been engaged in constitutes conduct causing [the Claimant] alarm and distress and that [the Defendants] ought to have known that it would have that effect".
"Under duress the Second Defendant settled these proceedings at a hearing on 10 February 2011. However the Claimant subsequently threatened further proceedings for defamation against the Second Defendant based on the same facts. The First Defendant had suffered a stroke and was suffering from depression and so requested an adjournment of the proceedings until she was fit enough to attend any court hearing. The Claimant agreed to lodge a Consent Order at the Court to this effect. Despite the draft Consent Order being signed by the First Defendant it was never lodged at the Court and the Claimant has taken no further steps in the Claim".
"Because the bringing of these proceedings by the Claimant, a solicitor, against his own client was an abuse of the process of the court and a serious breach of the Principles of the Solicitors Regulation Authority".
"1. The Claimant having served Requests for further information on the First and Second Defendants under CPR Part 18 the Defendants, if so advised, shall file and serve their replying evidence to these Requests by 4:00pm on Friday 14 March 2014.
2. the Claimant if so advised shall file and serve his replying evidence to the Applications of the First and Second Defendants by 4:00pm on Friday 28 March 2014. No further evidence shall be filed and served without leave.
3. The Application shall be set down for hearing by a High Court Judge with a time estimate of one day…"
"In view of the extreme seriousness of the allegations which are being made against [the Claimant] I have determined to file this evidence at the Court today (the due date) and seek advice from the police and the SRA before serving any evidence on [the Claimant] …"
"I shall be sending this witness statement to the Solicitors' Regulation Authority and the Police and Crime Commissioner for Hampshire …"
"1. that you discontinue your application …
2. that if you still wish to contest the claim then the proper way of doing this would be in the context of responding to our summary judgment application, which can now be restored, seeing that you are now recovered from your ill health three years ago…"
THE CLAIMANT'S APPLICATION NOTICE
THE APPLICATION BY THE SECOND DEFENDANT
THE APPLICATION BY THE FIRST DEFENDANT
THE CLAIMANT'S APPLICATION FOR AN INJUNCTION OR OTHER ORDER
"The Second Defendant must not, whether by himself or by any other person, publish, communicate or disclose to any other person (other than to legal advisers instructed in relation to the proceedings for the purpose of obtaining legal advice in relation to these proceedings) his witness statement or his wife's witness statement dated 14th March 2014 or any other witness statement filed or served in these proceedings".
"41. The judge was perhaps concerned, and rightly so, not to set up every complaint between lawyers as to the conduct of litigation as arguably a matter of harassment within the Act. It must be rare indeed that such complaints, even if in the heat of battle they go too far, could arguably fall foul of the Act. However, in my judgment, these three letters, particularly when viewed in the light of each other, and especially the last two, arguably amount to a deliberate attack on the professional and personal integrity of Mr Iqbal, in an attempt to pressurise him, by his exposure to his client and/or the court, into declining to act for Mr Butt or else into advising Mr Butt to meet the demands of Dean Manson. It cannot, at any rate arguably, assist Dean Manson that such letters were written in the context of litigation and in an attempt to improve their position in that litigation, or in an attempt to raise even serious and proper questions as to possible conflicts of interest. Arguably, the letters go way beyond such concerns. Indeed, Mr Brown conceded in argument that if the above was, even arguably, the view which could be taken of these letters, as distinct from the view of them which he submitted was the correct one, namely that they were simply and solely raising legitimate queries as to conflicts of interest between Mr Iqbal and his client and as to breach of confidence between Mr Iqbal and Dean Manson, then Mr Iqbal's claim could not be struck out, at any rate subject to issue (iv).
42 In sum, in my judgment, each of these letters does, when considered side by side, arguably evidence a campaign of harassment against Mr Iqbal. They are arguably capable of causing alarm or distress. They are arguably unreasonable, or oppressive and unreasonable, or oppressive and unacceptable, or genuinely offensive and unacceptable. Arguably, they go beyond annoyances or irritations, and beyond the ordinary banter and badinage of life. Arguably, the conduct alleged is of a gravity which could be characterised as criminal. A professional man's integrity is the lifeblood of his vocation. If it is deliberately and wrongly attacked, whether out of personal self-interest or malice, a potential claim lies under the Act….
54. Whatever the hardships involved in litigation, it is not the occasion for irrelevant and abusive dirt to be thrown as part of a malicious campaign. Just as even the freedom of the press may be abused in a rare case (Thomas v. News Group Newspapers Limited [2001] EWCA Civ 1233, [2002] EMLR 4), so even litigation, whose natural contentiousness also requires its own freedom of speech, can exceptionally be abused. I would, however, equally deplore satellite litigation."
"…the court may … (m) take any other step or make any other order for the purpose of managing the case and furthering the overriding objective."
"32.1 (1) The court may control the evidence by giving directions as to –
(a) the issues on which it requires evidence;
(b) the nature of the evidence which it requires to decide those issues; and
(c) the way in which the evidence is to be placed before the court.
(2) The court may use its power under this rule to exclude evidence that would otherwise be admissible….
32.12 (1) Except as provided by this rule, a witness statement may be used only for the purpose of the proceedings in which it is served.
(2) Paragraph (1) does not apply if and to the extent that–
(a) the witness gives consent in writing to some other use of it;
(b) the court gives permission for some other use; or
(c) the witness statement has been put in evidence at a hearing held in public.
32.13 … (2) Any person may ask for a direction that a witness statement is not open to inspection.
(3) The court will not make a direction under paragraph (2) unless it is satisfied that a witness statement should not be open to inspection because of –
(a) the interests of justice;
(b) the public interest;
(c) the nature of any expert medical evidence in the statement;
(d) the nature of any confidential information (including information relating to personal financial matters) in the statement; or
(e) the need to protect the interests of any child or protected party.
(4) The court may exclude from inspection words or passages in the statement."
CONCLUSION
i) The applications by the Defendants are dismissed and I declare them to be totally without merit;ii) The applications by the Claimant succeed to the following extent only:
a) I strike out the witness statements of the Second Defendant and his wife dated 24 March 2014, and the witness statement of the First Defendant dated 2 February 2014;b) I will consider any further order as indicated in para 53 above.