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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 >> Evans v Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust [2014] EWHC 3185 (QB) (08 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/3185.html Cite as: [2015] 1 All ER 1091, [2014] 6 Costs LO 899, [2015] WLR 4659, [2014] EWHC 3185 (QB), [2015] 1 WLR 4659 |
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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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Jayne Ellen Evans |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust |
Defendant |
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James Counsell (instructed by Browne Jacobson LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 29 September 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Leggatt :
The claim
The defendant's Part 36 offer
"This is a Part 36 Offer and is intended to have the consequences of Part 36. If it is accepted within 21 days from the date you are served with this letter, which we calculate to be until 4pm on 24 July 2014, the defendant will be responsible for your costs in accordance with Part 36.10 of the Civil Procedure Rules.
…
This offer can only be withdrawn or altered to be less advantageous to the claimant before [that time] with the permission of the Court."
The latter statement reflected CPR 36.3(5), which states:
"Before expiry of the relevant period a Part 36 offer may be withdrawn or its terms changed to be less advantageous to the offeree, only if the court gives permission."
"a Part 36 offer may be accepted at any time … unless the offeror serves notice of withdrawal on the offeree."
"There is no need for an unseemly rush to establish procedural advantage. If, exceptionally, the defendant wishes within the 21 days to withdraw or reduce a Part 36 payment, he should apply for permission to do so and inform the claimant of his application. If the claimant wishes to accept the Part 36 payment within the 21 days without permission, he should give the requisite written notice of acceptance. The stage is then set for the Court to decide the defendant's application in the light of the claimant's notice of acceptance."
It seems to me, although I have not heard argument on the point, that the position must be the same under the current version of CPR Part 36 in relation to a Part 36 offer. At all events I must assume this to be the case, for reasons that I will explain soon.
The claimant's application to enter judgment
"If the accepted sum is not paid within 14 days or such other period as has been agreed the offeree may enter judgment for the unpaid sum."
The defendant's application to withdraw the offer
"1. The Defendant shall have permission to make this application, pursuant to CPR rule 23.4(2)(c), without serving a copy of the application on the claimants.
2. The Defendant shall have permission, pursuant to CPR rule 36.3(5), to withdraw its Part 36 offer made by letter dated 3 July 2014 …
3. The purported acceptance of the Part 36 offer referred to in paragraph 2 above by the Claimant on 23 July 2014 shall be set aside and no steps shall be taken to seek to enforce payment of the said sum until further order.
4. All proceedings in this matter be stayed for a period of 3 months from the date of this order.
5. The requirement in CPR rule 23.9(2) (that the application notice and evidence in support be served on a respondent party after a without notice order shall have been made) shall be dispensed with until such time as the Court orders otherwise.
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TAKE NOTICE that this order has been made without notice to the claimant and the claimant has the right to make an application to set aside or vary the terms of the order, pursuant to CPR rule 23.10."
The claimant's application to set aside the ex parte order
"[t]he remaining questions as to whether:
a) the claimant is entitled to be provided with the notice of application and supporting evidence filed by the defendant in support of its application dated 24 July 2014 to withdraw the Part 36 offer;
b) the court should permit the defendant to withdraw its offer; and
c) the action should be stayed until 7 November 2014.
be adjourned for an urgent expedited hearing to a High Court Judge …"
The expedited hearing
i) whether I should accede to the defendant's request to consider material which has not been disclosed to the claimant; andii) what conclusions, if any, I can properly reach on the claimant's applications without sight of this material.
The claimant's case
Authorities
"The basic rule is that (subject to certain established and limited exceptions) the court cannot exercise its power to regulate its own procedures in such a way as will deny parties their fundamental common law right to participate in the proceedings in accordance with the common law principles of natural justice and open justice. To put the same point in a different way, the court must exercise the power to regulate its procedure in a way which respects these two important principles which are integral to the common law right to a fair trial."
"I have always believed that a court of unlimited jurisdiction is the master of its own procedure. But that does not mean that the court can do what it likes. Everything that it does must have regard to the fundamental principles of open justice and of fairness. The principle of legality demands nothing less than that. There is, of course, a very wide area of procedure where these issues of principle are not engaged at all. There comes a point, however, where the line must be drawn between procedural choices which are regulatory only and procedural choices that affect the very substance of the notion of a fair trial. Choices as to how the conduct of the court's business may be simplified, made less expensive or made easier to understand are one thing. Choices that cut across absolutely fundamental principles such as the right to a fair trial, the right to be confronted by one's accusers and the right to know the reasons for the outcome are entirely different. The court has for centuries held the line as the guardian of these fundamental principles."
"Even more fundamental to any justice system in a modern, democratic society is the principle of natural justice, whose most important aspect is that every party has the right to know the full case against him, and the right to test and challenge that case fully. A closed hearing is therefore even more offensive to fundamental principle than a private hearing. At least a private hearing cannot be said, of itself, to give rise to inequality or even unfairness as between the parties. But that cannot be said of an arrangement where the court can look at evidence or hear arguments on behalf of one party without the other party ('the excluded party') knowing, or being able to test, the contents of that evidence and those arguments ('the closed material'), or even being able to see all the reasons why the court reached its conclusions."
"There may come a point where a line must be drawn when procedural choices of one kind or another have to be made. A distinction may be drawn between choices which do not raise issues of principle and choices that affect the very substance of a fair trial. There is no room for compromise where the choices are of the latter kind."
"This is because such an application will not ordinarily involve the court deciding any question of substantive legal right as between the applicant and the respondent. Rather it is an ancillary procedure designed to facilitate the attempt of one or other party to see that relevant evidence is made available to the court in determining the substantive dispute. Applications of this kind, such as an application for a witness summons in civil or criminal proceedings, are typically made ex parte."
"This attempt to create a new category of case to which the basic principles of natural justice do not apply is founded on the Supreme Court's acceptance that there are two classes of case where a departure from the normal rule has been justified for special reasons in the interests of justice (Al Rawi [63] and [64]). But if, to the two categories of children and protection of commercial interests, there is to be added a third, without Parliamentary intervention, then it is for the Supreme Court to make that addition, not for this court. We are bound by the principles expressed in Al Rawi and BSkyB."
The defendant's position
Should the court see the defendant's evidence?
The defendant's without notice application
"a copy of the application notice and any evidence in support must, unless the court orders otherwise, be served with the order on any party or other person–
(a) against whom the order was made; and
(b) against whom the order was sought."
It was under this rule that the court in paragraph 5 of the ex parte order quoted earlier "ordered otherwise" by dispensing with the requirement to serve the application notice and evidence in support on the claimant. I cannot accept, however, that it is legitimate to use this dispensing power in a way which is calculated to prevent a party against whom the order was made from exercising effectively its right to make an application to set aside the order under CPR 23.10. Yet that is plainly the effect of the order made in this case.
Applying inter partes
The request for an adjournment
Change of circumstances
Conclusion
i) It was not permissible to allow the defendant to withdraw its Part 36 offer and to set aside the claimant's purported acceptance of that offer on an application made without notice to the claimant, and the ex parte order dated 7 August 2014 must therefore be set aside;
ii) The defendant cannot rely in opposition to the claimant's application to enter judgment or in support of a request to adjourn the hearing on evidence or arguments not disclosed to the claimant and to which the claimant has no opportunity to respond;
iii) It follows that, unless the defendant serves the evidence and discloses the arguments on which it wishes to rely in opposition to the claimant's application forthwith, the claimant is entitled to enter judgment pursuant to CPR 36.11(7).