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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> W Nagel (a firm) & Anor v Pluczenik & Anor [2019] EWHC 3126 (QB) (21 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/3126.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3126 (QB), [2019] Costs LR 2117 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
LONDON CIRCUIT COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
W NAGEL (A Firm) |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and – PLUCZENIK DIAMOND COMPANY NV - and – |
Defendant/ Appellant |
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CHAIM PLUCZENIK TSVI PLUCZENIK |
Defendants/ Appellants |
____________________
for Appellants (Defendants)
Jonathan Cohen QC (instructed by DWF LLP) for Respondent (Claimant)
Hearing date: 5 November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Griffiths :
i) That the Master erred in finding that the Court had power to re-list a hearing under CPR 71 in respect of an order for costs to be assessed if not agreed, where the amount of costs had not been assessed or agreed.ii) That the Master erred in finding that the application for a CPR Part 71 examination in this particular case, and the order made upon that application, had been made in respect of orders for costs.
iii) That the Master's exercise of discretion (if she had a discretion) involved an error of principle and was plainly wrong.
Facts
The parties and the trial
Orders made by the trial judge
Application to examine the officers
The oral hearing
Attempts to restore the oral hearing
Payment
New arguments
"The CPR 71 process is now at an end… Since… the judgment debt including interest has now been satisfied, there are no questions which can be asked under the CPR 71 process. Any further hearing would, therefore, serve no purpose; worse, it would be vexatious and oppressive to compel an individual, living abroad, to attend a court hearing for examination in those circumstances. Since the CPR 71 process is complete, the court has no further jurisdiction over the officers of the (former) judgment creditor.
Given these facts, you are able to alter your order since it has not yet been sealed… In any event, given the material change of circumstances, you are able to vary or revoke your order listing a further hearing, under CPR 3.1(7). We respectfully submit that you should do so, there is no purpose in having an order sealed which contains the listing for a hearing which will have to be vacated in any event."
The email was a couple of days before the third and final payment on 27 March, which was in respect of orders for interim payments of costs made by Master McCloud herself on 28 February and 11 March 2019.
"If anything remains in dispute I shall have a hearing but my view at present is that where the debt and interest have been paid, and the order has not been sealed, then it ceases to be appropriate to continue with the Part 71 questioning…"
"…The CPR does not provide that jurisdiction falls away if the respondent decides to make payment… The Defendant has not satisfied the outstanding judgment… there remains a judgment in favour of the Claimant for costs subject to detailed assessment, the value of which is likely to be something well in excess of £600,000…
Moreover, it is not as if the Claimant can wait, see if the judgment for costs is satisfied and then apply again under CPR Part 71 if it is not… the Claimant was only able to bring this Part 71 application because it was able to personally serve the Defendant's officers in England… The chance of the Claimant being able to successful serve the Defendant's officers again… is remote.
If the court was to accede to Mr Head's suggestion, the likely outcome is that the utility of CPR Part 71 will be lost forever and the Claimant will struggle to recover their costs without the availability of this weapon in the Court's armoury…"
The hearing and the McCloud Order appealed from
i) Refused Pluczenik's variation application, i.e. the application "for her order made on 11 March 2019 to be varied or set-aside" (quoting the ninth recital to the McCloud Order);
ii) Addressed penal notices to the Directors;
iii) Ordered relisting before a High Court Judge of the hearing adjourned, originally, by Master Leslie; and
iv) Made further orders for costs against Pluczenik, some on the indemnity basis and some on the standard basis, and ordered payment of £7,500 on account of costs.
The appeal: Ground (1)
"In order to enable a judgment creditor to choose more intelligently and more effectively the appropriate mode of enforcement against a judgment debtor, provision is made for what is called discovery in aid of execution, i.e. the oral examination of the judgment debtor as to his circumstances and in particular what his assets, income and property are and what are his liabilities, so that both the judgment creditor and the court can see how he stands and the judgment creditor can decide which method he should employ to enforce the judgment in a fruitful and effective way."
The process assists in choosing a mode of enforcement for the future; it is not enforcement in itself.
"…emphasised that under the present system of enforcement, in the great majority of cases, the judgment creditor would proceed to choose his mode of enforcement without having knowledge of the actual circumstances of the debtor and without therefore being able to know which would be the most appropriate method of enforcement to adopt. It is true that there are provisions for obtaining discovery in aid of execution, i.e. obtaining knowledge about the circumstances of the debtor, what property and assets he owns and so forth and on that basis choosing the appropriate method of enforcement; but the Report emphasised that comparatively few judgment creditors proceed in this way but are more inclined to proceed in the dark without knowing what the financial circumstances of the debtor are and very often the mode of enforcement they choose proves entirely useless and abortive, thus delaying recovery and increasing costs."
Ground (2)
"…in my judgment, this application does cover the costs order. It recites the costs order in paragraph 3. The fact that later on it spells out the amount owing simply complies with that part of the rules, that where a sum is owed it has to be stated, but that is not sufficient, in my judgment, to oust the provisions of Part 71 in so far as they apply to currently uncalculated sums."
"The claimant ('the judgment creditor') applies for an order that an officer of the Defendant company or corporation ('the judgment debtor') attend court to provide information about the judgment debtor's means and any other information needed to enforce the order given on 21 July 2017 by the High Court of Justice, Queen's Bench Division, Royal Courts of Justice, Mercantile Court and the order given on 3 October 2017 by the High Court of Justice, Business and Property Courts of England and Wales, Commercial Court in claim no. CL-2015-000087."
"If the total amount owing is paid (together with any further interest falling due), the judgment creditor may agree that the questioning need not take place (but may ask for an order for costs)."
It was argued that this showed that the examination could only cover the "total amount owing" and, therefore, not the orders for costs. But the sentence, for what it is worth, only states that "the judgment creditor may agree", not that it will, or must. Nor does it refer to any action by the court. It does not state that, were the stated amount to be paid, the judgment creditor would have any right to have the process discontinued. No Civil Procedure Rule, or provision of a Practice Direction, says that either. I am satisfied it is not the case. Payment of the specific amounts due and identified did not entitle the Directors or Pluczenik to have the process halted as of right. If a payment were made, and nothing remained outstanding (with or without detailed assessment or a quantum hearing), or if it appeared that the amount likely to be due on the parts of the judgment or order in question which the payment did not cover, like the order for costs, was too small to justify a Part 71 procedure, an application could be made for the court to exercise the discretionary powers I have referred to in paragraph 45 above. But that is a point going to Ground 3 of the appeal. It does not persuade me that the Kay Orders, or the application notices upon which they were based, excluded the costs orders made on 21 July 2017 from the ambit of the Part 71 examination altogether.
Ground (3)
"To the extent that the order re-listing a hearing under CPR 71 entailed the exercise of a discretion by the Master and/or was a case management decision, the Master's approach involved an error of principle and was plainly wrong in the sense of being outside the generous ambit where reasonable decision-makers may disagree…"
i) The value of the costs order did not appear to be small or trivial, such that the Part 71 process was disproportionate (para 10 of Master McCloud's judgment).ii) The Part 71 jurisdiction had been invoked only because of a brief opportunity to issue and serve proceedings when the Directors were in the country for a few days. If the Master were to relinquish the jurisdiction in her discretion (a jurisdiction, I emphasise, which had been validly invoked in the first place), it seems unlikely that it could be revived in future: "…were Part 71 to fall away and have to be restarted… that would prove to be very difficult, I have little doubt" (para 10).
iii) "The past history of this case shows that unless there is momentum nothing much will happen" (para 11).
Conclusion