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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Rudd v Bridle & Anor [2019] EWHC 1986 (QB) (24 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/1986.html Cite as: [2019] Costs LR 1067, [2019] EWHC 1986 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Dr Robin Rudd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) John Bridle (2) J&S Bridle Limited |
Defendants |
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James Fairbairn (of Dentons UK and Middle East LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 17 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE WARBY:
Introduction
(1) The first is for disclosure by Mr Bridle and the Company of "the identity of the individuals, companies or entities who have financed or provided financial support to the defendants or either of them during and in relation to the present litigation and related documents" ("the Funding Disclosure Application").(2) Secondly, the claimant seeks an order for the disclosure by Mr Bridle of three documents said to be "mentioned" in a witness statement of 6 June 2019, made by Mr Robin Francis of the defendants' solicitors ("the Witness Statement Application").
Funding Disclosure
Legal framework
(1) The power to make a costs order against a non-party is exceptional in the sense that such orders are not usually made. Such an order may only be made where there has been conduct by the non-party such as to render the order just and reasonable: see Symphony Group at 192H (Balcombe LJ);(2) The power will not generally be used against "pure funders", that is to say persons who provide financial support to a litigant but who have no personal interest in the litigation, who do not stand to benefit from it, who do not fund the litigation as a matter of business, and who do not seek to control its course: Dymocks [25(1) – (3)] (Lord Brown).
"24. A number of recent authorities have stressed that this is a jurisdiction which must be exercised in the interests of justice and that its exercise should not be overcomplicated by authority."
He was referring, among others, to these observations of Moore-Bick LJ in the Deutsche Bank case at [62]:
"We think it important to emphasise that the only immutable principle is that the discretion must be exercised justly. It should also be recognised that, since the decision involves an exercise of discretion, limited assistance is likely to be gained from the citation of other decisions at first instance in which judges have or have not granted an order of this kind."
"27. The authorities illustrate "the variety of circumstances in which the court is likely to be called upon to exercise the discretion" and "the kind of considerations upon which the court will focus", but are not to be treated as providing "a rulebook". The kind of considerations illustrated by the authorities include the following:
(1) Whether the non-party funds the proceedings and substantially also controls or is to benefit from them and is the "real party" to them;
(2) Whether the non-party promotes and funds proceedings by an insolvent company solely or substantially for his own financial benefit;
(3) Whether there is impropriety by the non-party in the pursuit of the litigation.
(4) Whether the non-party causes costs to be incurred….
28. (1) (2) and (3) are all examples of circumstances in which non-party costs orders have been made. Generally (4), causation, is also required "to some extent" (per Morritt LJ in Global Equities Ltd v Globe Legal Services Ltd [1999] BLR 232) although it is not a necessary pre-condition, as held in Total Spares & Supplies Ltd v Antares SRL [2006] EWHC 1537 (Ch). In that case, however, there was still a causal link between the non-party's actions and the claimant's costs recovery in that he had deprived the claimant of any realistic opportunity of recovering its costs. The link was with the recovery of costs rather than the incurring of costs, but in both cases the claimant has to bear costs in circumstances where he otherwise would not have done."
Issues
The facts
(1) There was significant funding pursuant to legal expenses insurance cover taken out before the event. The evidence is that the insured (the Company and its officers) compromised a dispute with the insurers in return for a lump sum, which was then used to fund the defence of the claim. The settlement was achieved in August 2018. On 10 August 2018, the defendants' solicitors wrote to report that the lump sum received was "sufficient to finance this case to the conclusion of the trial in accordance with the figures set out in the cost budget", though it did not provide a fund to cover any adverse costs. The budget approved in March 2018 was a few pounds short of £103,000. It was later increased modestly to cover additional trial costs. The evidence of Mr Bridle is that the insurance money has in fact been used to fund the defence of the claim. No complaint or criticism is or could be made of funding through insurance. (I add that it is clear that there is no question of insurers seeking to recoup through subrogation to the Company's claim against the claimant.)(2) The Company supported Mr Bridle's defence of the claim, while the dispute with insurers was ongoing. Between 26 January 2017 and 7 April 2017, the Company paid a total of £41,722 to Dentons, who were then acting for Mr Bridle. The company was not a party at the time. On 14 March 2017, Master Fontaine made a costs order against Mr Bridle in the sum of £7,722. That was evidently discharged by the Company. The reason for these payments appears, however, to have been that the Company was able to provide ready cash which was not available to Mr Bridle in the time required. The Company also funded Dentons to carry out the process of compliance (or purported compliance) with the claimant's SARs.
(3) The Partnership funded and supported the Company. That was the inference I had drawn, on the basis of the evidence given at the trial. The Company had a deficit on its balance sheet, but Mr Bridle's evidence at trial was that the Company was not "bankrupt" because its debt was owed to the Partnership. The overall effect of the evidence I now have from Mr Bridle, including that contained in earlier statements, is corroborated by documents and is this. The Partnership ceased trading in 2004. But its accumulated assets were used to fund the Company. By 29 August 2015, the loan account reflecting that funding had reached £100,277.96. By September 2016, the Partnership had just short of £39,000 in the bank, representing the balance of "undistributed savings accumulated over many years." The entirety of that balance was paid over to the Company. It was used by the Company to provide much of the financial support I have described above.
(1) The evidence does not establish a risk of non-payment by Mr Bridle. He has no history of default, but rather a history of compliance. He has substantial assets. The evidence suggests he has realised those assets in part, to meet the costs order I made at the time I gave judgment. He has embarked on the process of realising the remainder. I have not been persuaded that the proceeds would be insufficient to meet his outstanding liabilities, once the claimant's costs have been properly assessed.(2) There has been some third-party funding of Mr Bridle's defence of this case, by insurers and, to a more limited extent, by the Company and the Partnership. Otherwise, the claimant has failed to establish any basis for the proposition that there has been third-party funding of the defence of this case. He has not pressed any such contention.
(3) The third-party funding that has been established and admitted could not justify a third-party costs order. The funding was legitimate, and the contrary is not tenable.
(4) For the reason given at (1) above, there would be no practical need for a third-party costs order. Further, on the evidence, a third-party costs order against the Company or the Partnership would be pointless. There is no reason to believe or suspect that there are hidden sources of wealth. For these reasons it would be contrary to the overriding objective to make an order which would in all probability lead to a further waste of resources to no useful purpose.
The Witness Statement Application
"13. The Judgment Debtor has informed Dentons:
(a) Whilst some form of equity release may have been an option, he has decided to sell part of the charged property to pay the costs in the Judgement. The Judgment creditor is aware of this, given Dentons' letter dated 21 May 2019 (page 4).
(b) To pay the Judgment Debt, Judgment Debtor took out a short-term loan to cover those costs whilst the sale completed.
(c) Once that sale is completed, part of the proceeds will be used to satisfy the loan. At that point, loan interest would cease to be incurred. The buyer's solicitor has informed the Judgment Debtor that the sale cannot be completed due to the restrictions put on the property by Judgment Creditor in relation to the charging order.
(d) This has resulted in the Judgment Debtor incurring unnecessary interest due to the Judgment Creditor's refusal to discharge the charging order."
(1) "The short-term loan". The claimant submits that paragraph 13(b) contains a direct allusion to a document containing a loan agreement to which Mr Bridle is a party. I disagree. A loan is a transaction, which may or may not be contained in or evidenced by a document. This is a reference to a transaction, akin to "he guaranteed".(2) "The contract of sale." The claimant contends that paragraphs 13(a) and (c) mention such a document. The submission is that "it is inconceivable that a contract for the sale of part of the First Defendant's home, negotiated by professional solicitors, would be anything other than a written agreement." This is an odd application, in some ways. It has been the claimant's own case on this application that there was no such transaction, and that I should infer that the £50,000 interim payment did not derive from such a sale, but instead from a third-party funder. But leaving that aside, this is another case where there is no direct allusion to a document. At best, the existence of such a document might be inferred. In fact, on a fair reading, the effect of paragraphs 13(a) and (c) is that not only has no such transaction been completed, there may not even be an agreement to sell. This undermines even the inference.
(3) "The communication when the Buyer's solicitor informed the First Defendant or his Solicitors that the sale could not be completed". It is submitted that paragraph 13(c) "makes direct allusion to correspondence from the putative buyer's solicitor". It does not. The existence of correspondence might be inferred, on the footing that solicitors usually communicate on such matters in writing rather than face-to-face or by telephone. But there is no direct allusion. Indeed, the case against treating these statements as direct allusions to documents is reinforced by the fact that they are all statements about what Dentons has been told by Mr Bridle. On the face of the statement it is clear that Mr Francis is giving hearsay evidence, which may indeed be second-hand hearsay.
Disposal