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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Salekipour & Anor v Parmar & Anor [2016] EWHC 1466 (QB) (23 June 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/1466.html Cite as: [2016] QB 987, [2016] 3 WLR 728, [2016] WLR(D) 334, [2016] EWHC 1466 (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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Salekipour & anr |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Parmar & anr |
Defendant |
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Mr Paul Letman (instructed by Rice-Jones & Smiths) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 8th June 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Garnham:
Introduction
The History
The Original Proceedings
"17. … It will be seen that much depends on which of two conflicting accounts between the two sides I prefer. Indeed, Mr Richard Power, appearing for Mrs Salekipour… suggested the evidence on the opposite side of the dispute differs so profoundly that the only conclusion is that there is 'collective lying' on one side or the other.
18. I accept that this applies in particular to the first claim (the '£25,000' dispute), the second claim (the 'overpaid rent' dispute), and the fourth claim (the 'harassment' dispute), the third claim (the 'unreasonable withholding of consent' dispute) depends mainly on an analysis of correspondence passing between the solicitors who are acting. The counter claim is a mixture of facts and law.
19. Credibility is thus vital in this case and this has had the result of each side has sought to introduce evidence going to credit…
33. As the Defendant's witnesses, Mr Fiszer was a bluff Polish shopkeeper who gave evidence in good but careful English. He was the most independent of the supporting witnesses and I am quite satisfied that he was sincerely telling me the truth as he saw it. I feel able to rely on his evidence…
40. Mrs Parmar presented a marked contrast to the emotional Claimant, but I will still have to examine how far I can safely accept her evidence at face value. In this case, much of what I have to decide rests on whose account of the facts I believe or prefer. In deciding this, I shall have regard to the degree of support for either contention which can be derived from documents, other clear facts, or just from plain common sense…
46. The first issue then is whether or not the Claimants satisfied me… that any payment such as they allege did actually change hands. This is an issue of fact. In effect, I must decide whether I believe Mrs Parmar or Mr Salim. This also means that one of them is not telling me the truth, as there is hardly room for a finding of honest innocent mistake about such a stark and simple point…
53. Taking into account all the evidence therefore I do not believe Mrs Parmar's assertion that she let the Claimants into possession only at Easter 2006, and I do not believe her associated assertion that she took no money from them before rent became payable under the lease. Given both my assessment of her in evidence, and the circumstances disclosed in the documents, I find this implausible in the extreme and entirely out of character. Whilst I accept Mr Fiszer's evidence that she did let him into possession of the shop rent free for a period before he took over the unit in 2011, I note that this was after Mrs Parmar became aware of the allegations being made against her in these proceedings." (emphasis added)
"As regards the claim for unpaid rent, Mrs Salekipour's resistance to this rests on the contention that Mrs Parmar's harassing conduct amounted to a repudiation of the lease, justifying her leaving the premises in February 2010 and refusing to pay any further rent. I have found that there was no such harassing conduct. It follows that the lease, with its liability for rent, continued until such point as Mrs Parmar, in effect, accepted its termination… With regard to that I am satisfied by the evidence of both Mr Fiszer and Mrs Parmar that this did not take place until January 2011." (emphasis added)
The Rescission Proceedings
"In March 2012, I went to court to give evidence. I was told by Mrs Parmar that if I did not go to court for her and she lost then I would lose the shop. Before I went into court Mr Parmar and Mrs Parmar and some others got me in a room and told me what to say and in particular to say that I had only been in the premises since February-March 2011."
"I was asked by the barrister for Mrs Salekipour when did I start work and I said two months before the lease which would have made it about February. The Judge asked how could I have carried out all the works and I said that we were Polish builders. I feel very bad about this now as it was not true. I also said in court that the premises were devastated and very messy. This was also untrue."
"I am sure that had evidence been presented during the trial before Her Honour Judge Marshall QC that Mrs Parmer had perverted the course of justice before Mr Fiszer gave evidence it would have entirely changed the way the Judge approached and came to her decision. Thus it is very, very material to the outcome. So if I had jurisdiction to deal with this case, which I have already ruled I have not, I would grant the application to set aside the District Judge's order and give directions for trial on the issue of subornation."
The Competing Arguments on the Appeal
Discussion
The Jurisdiction Argument
"23. Equity jurisdiction.
The county court shall have all the jurisdiction of the High Court to hear and determine…
(g) proceedings for relief against fraud or mistake, where the damage sustained or the estate or fund in respect of which relief is sought does not exceed in amount or value the county court limit…
38. Remedies available in county courts.
(1) Subject to what follows, in any proceedings in the county court the court may make any order which could be made by the High Court if the proceedings were in the High Court…
70. Finality of judgments and orders.
Every judgment and order of the county court shall, except as provided by this or any other Act or as may be prescribed, be final and conclusive between the parties."
"20.02 It has been established since the time of Coke that 'acts of the highest judicial authority' though 'not to be impeached from within' yet 'are impeachable from without' if they were produced by fraud or collusion (fraud). 'Although it is not permitted to show that the courts were mistaken, it may be shown that they were misled'. Fraud is a collateral act, which infects the most solemn proceedings of courts of justice."
"Where a new trial is sought upon the ground of fraud, procedure by motion and affidavit is not the most satisfactory and convenient method of determining the dispute. The fraud must be both alleged and proved; and the better course in such a case is to take independent proceedings to set aside a judgment upon the ground of fraud, when the whole issue can be properly defined, fought out and determined, though a motion for a new trial is also an available weapon and in some cases may be more convenient."
"It has long been the settled practice of the court that the proper method of impeaching a completed judgment on the ground of fraud is by action in which, as in any other action based on fraud, the particulars of the fraud must be exactly given and the allegation established by the strict proof such a charge requires."
"Although the old cases say that where there is an issue of fraud to be tried that must be done by commencing a fresh action, I do not think that in this day and age that should always be necessary. All that is needed is that the issue of fraud should be determined. That could be done just as well (if not better) by this court referring the trial of the fraud issue to a High Court judge pursuant to CPR r 52.10(2)(b) . The possibility that that might be an appropriate course was presaged by Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers MR, at para 21 of Hamilton v Al Fayed. In my view that would be a better course to follow in the present case for two reasons. First, the costs of a fresh action would necessarily exceed the costs of the trial of an issue. If the issue is referred, the matter could be dealt with quite expeditiously. The judge could give directions as to the clarification of the allegations and as to the exchange of evidence. In any event, most of that has already taken place. The matter could be ready for hearing within a very short time. Second, this court would be able to direct that the issue be tried by (the original trial judge)."
"42. There is no doubt that it is open to an appellant to take action against the successful party in the litigation to seek to have judgment set aside on grounds of fraud. This is a well established principle of equity."
"However, in none of these appeals does it appear to have been argued that the appropriate remedy was for the appellant to take an action to set aside the original judgment for fraud, and neither Flower v Lloyd 6 Ch D 297 nor Jonesco v Beard [1930] AC 298 was referred to in any of these judgments. Indeed, so far as one can tell, it does not appear that they were even cited to these courts. I do not, therefore, read these cases as undermining the authority of the principles established in those cases. In any event, they could not of course depart from the principles enunciated in Jonesco v Beard in their Lordships' House."
"The question raised before the county court judge was identically the same question as that raised in the present action. The judge had jurisdiction in equity under s. 67, sub-s. 8, of the County Courts Act, 1888, to deal with this deed of release on the ground of fraud. He determined that question, and his determination can be explained only on the ground that the release was obtained by fraud"
"But I think we are at liberty to look at what happened before the county court judge; and when I do so I am satisfied that he had jurisdiction to deal with the deed of release upon the application before him. The judge did deal with it and set it aside, and it seems to me that ss. 9 and 67 of the County Courts Act, 1888, gave him jurisdiction to deal with it. Both parties attended before him, and the deed in question was invoked by the plaintiff as an answer to the claim for taxation. The judge heard the evidence and adjudicated upon the question raised. The very same question which is raised in this action was decided by the judge, and that lets in the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court, as appears from the cases which have been cited to us, to stay the action as frivolous and vexatious and an abuse of the process of the Court. In my opinion we are properly exercising that jurisdiction in this case."
"35 Mr Buley's second submission followed on from his analysis of the nature of the jurisdiction and remedy to set aside a previous decision which had been obtained by fraud. He pointed out, first of all, that the County Court is the creation of statute. Unlike the High Court which inherited the powers of the old Court of Chancery, the County Court has no inherent jurisdiction to set aside its own final orders. Moreover, he submitted, there must be some doubt as to whether it has jurisdiction to determine a free-standing claim to set aside a previous decision of the County Court, which second claim is based on an allegation that the first judgment was obtained by fraud. Mr Buley submitted that it is not clear that this kind of action comes within the scope of Part II of the County Courts Act 1984 which sets out the statutory basis for that court's jurisdiction. … He noted that CPR r3.1(7) …cannot provide the original jurisdiction."
"I agree with Mr Buley that it is very much open to doubt that this procedural power was intended to be used in fresh proceedings to set aside or rescind a judgment in circumstances where it is alleged that the original order was obtained by fraud. We were not shown any example of that jurisdiction being used in such a manner.
37. In the course of the hearing we did not fully investigate all these points. It seemed to us that there was sufficient in all the points that Mr Buley brought to our attention to conclude that, in this case, there was not an effective alternative remedy in a collateral action of the kind envisaged in Flower v Lloyd (No1) and Jonesco v Beard…"
"It was (counsel's) submission that if we are minded to regard (a witnesses) evidence as apparently credible and compelling, we should nonetheless decline to admit it on this appeal and leave (the claimant) to bring a new action to set aside the original decision as having been obtained by fraud. There is some doubt as to whether either the county court or even the High Court has jurisdiction to entertain an action to set aside or rescind a decision of the county court – see the discussion in Bishop v Chokkar… However, in my view the better course here is to admit the evidence on the appeal…"
i) The county court is a creation of statute and unlike the High Court has no inherent jurisdiction;ii) Respectfully acknowledging Tomlinson LJ's doubts on the point, it seems clear to me from the other authorities set out above that the High Court has jurisdiction to hear proceedings for rescission of a previous decision on the grounds of fraud;
iii) The more common means of challenging a judgment obtained by fraud is by way of an appeal, but the remedy of a fresh action for rescission of a judgment remains available in the High Court;
iv) In recent cases, the Court of Appeal has doubted whether the county court has jurisdiction to rescind its own decisions, but there is no decided case to that effect;
v) The county court does have jurisdiction to set aside a deed of release of a judgment debt obtained by fraud.
The Alternative Grounds
"Where it is clearly established by fresh evidence that the court was deliberately deceived in relation to the credibility of a witness, a fresh trial will be ordered where there is a real danger that this affected the outcome of the trial."
Conclusions