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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Briggs & Forrester Electrical Ltd v Southfield School for Girls & Anor [2005] EWHC 1734 (TCC) (20 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2005/1734.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1734 (TCC), [2005] BLR 468 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand London |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BRIGGS & FORRESTER ELECTRICAL LIMITED | (Applicant) | |
-and- | ||
(1) THE GOVERNORS OF SOUTHFIELD SCHOOL FOR GIRLS | ||
(2) NORTHAMPTONSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL | (Respondents) |
____________________
JL Harpham Ltd Official Court Reporters and Tape Transcribers
55 Queen Street Sheffield , S1 2DX
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For the Applicant: MISS KATE GRANGE
For the Respondents: MR SIMON HARGREAVES
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Crown Copyright ©
20th July 2005
HIS HONOUR JUDGE COULSON QC:
Introduction.
The Protocol Procedure
"6. Since the work done by B&W was not satisfactory, and caused some asbestos pollution and contamination to the school, it is inevitable that B&F will be held liable for breach of contract to the school. B&F had a contractual obligation to carry out their work in a good and workmanlike manner, and it is clear that they, through B&W, did not do so".
"It is not accepted that the school was contaminated by asbestos prior to the breaches of contract on the part of your client. Your letter contains no evidence to that effect. If you do have such evidence, then it should be disclosed, please. Failing that, we shall be forced to conclude that your remarks are pure speculation. Indeed it is apparent that much of your pre-action disclosure request is calculated to provide fuel for this speculation".
Relevant principles
"1. This rule applies when an application is made to the Court under any Act for disclosure before proceedings have started.
2. The application must be supported by evidence.
3. The Court may make an order under this rule only where
(a) the respondent is likely to be a party to subsequent proceedings,
(b) the applicant is also likely to be a party to those proceedings,
(c) if proceedings had started, the respondent's duty by way of standard disclosure - set out in Rule 31.6 - would extend to the documents or classes of documents of which the applicant seeks disclosure, and
(d) disclosure before proceedings have started is desirable in order to: (i) dispose fairly of the anticipated proceedings, (ii) assist the dispute to be resolved without proceedings, or (iii) save costs".
"76: In general, however, it should in my judgment be remembered that the extent of standard disclosure cannot easily be discerned without clarity as to the issues which would arise once pleadings in the prospective litigation had been formulated. This Court touched on the question in Bermuda International Securities -v- KPMG [2001] Lloyd's Rep PN 392 397, Paragraph 26, when Waller LJ there said that
'The circumstances spelt out by the rules show that it will only be ordered where the Court could say that the documents asked for will be documents that will have to be produced at the standard disclosure stage. It follows from that that the Court must be clear what the issues in the litigation are likely to be, i.e. what case the claimant is likely to be making, and what defence is likely to be being run, so as to make sure the documents being asked for are ones which will adversely affect the case of one side or the other, or support the case of one side or the other.'
77: It also seems to me to follow that if there would be considerable doubt as to whether the disclosure stage would ever be reached, that is a matter which the Court can and should take into account as a matter of its discretion."
"81: It is plain not only that the test of 'desirable' is one that easily merges into an exercise of discretion, but that the test of 'dispose fairly' does so too. In the circumstances it seems to me that it is necessary not to confuse the jurisdictional and the discretionary aspects of the paragraph as a whole. In Bermuda International Securities, Waller LJ contemplated that Paragraph 3(d) may involve a two-stage process. I think that is correct. In my judgment, for jurisdictional purposes the Court is only permitted to consider the granting of pre-action disclosure where there is a real prospect in principle of such an order being fair to the parties if litigation is commenced, or of assisting the parties to avoid litigation, or of saving costs in any event. If there is such a real prospect, then the Court should go on to consider the question of discretion, which has to be considered on all the facts and not merely in principle but in detail.
82 Of course, since the questions of principle and of detail can merge into one another, it is not easy to keep the two stages of the process separate. Nor is it perhaps vital to do so provided however, that the Court is aware of a need for both stages to be carried out. The danger, however, is that a Court may be misled by the ease with which the jurisdictional threshold can be passed, into thinking that it has thereby decided the question of discretion, when in truth it has not. This is a real danger, because first, in very many if not most cases, it will be possible to make a case for achieving one or other of the three purposes, and secondly, each of the three possibilities is in itself inherently desirable."
"… discretion is not confined and will depend on all the facts of the case. Among the important considerations, however, as it seems to me, are: the nature of the injury or loss complained of; the clarity and identification of the issues raised by the complaint; the nature of the documents requested; the relevance of any protocol or pre-action inquiries; and the opportunity which the complainant has to make his case without pre-action disclosure."
"The more diffuse the allegations and the wider the disclosure sought, the more sceptical the Court is entitled to be".
(b) As to the reality that applications of this sort inevitably involve at least some speculation, Langley J in XL London Markets said:
"It has of course to be kept in mind, as Miss Blanchard submitted, that by definition this is a jurisdiction which typically will involve some element of speculation, and may not lend itself to precision. It is a powerful argument against an order that the applicant can well make a case without disclosure. It follows than an applicant will often, if not usually, be unsure of the specific nature of any case he may have and indeed one of the salutary objectives of the rule is to resolve claims without proceedings."
(c) Ms. Grange, who appeared on behalf of the Applicant, also referred me to Paragraphs 31 and 32 of the Judgment of Langley J in XL London Market. I have borne in mind his comments both in relation to fairness and discretion, although I think that, as I have already indicated, they are further examples of a Judge applying the general principles to the particular factual matters in the case before him.
The application generally
"Unfortunately, and despite repeated requests, the proposed Claimants' solicitors, Shoosmiths, have failed to disclose any documentation relevant to the claim, and as such it has remained impossible for the proposed Defendants to consider various issues, namely quantification of the claim, and liability".
At the end of the statement, Ms. Maher makes plain the basis of the application, at Paragraphs 21 to 23. She says:
"21: It is the proposed Second Defendant's submission that without the requested documentation. it is impossible for the proposed Defendants to quantify the proposed Claimants' claim. If the proposed Defendants are unable to quantify the claim, it is also impossible to put forward a sensible offer of settlement, if so inclined, with a view to attempting resolution of the dispute and saving the costs of proceedings, possibly to arbitration or to trial.
22: The total sum claimed in respect of reinstatement and decontamination works is substantial. And in order for the proposed Defendants' solicitors and their experts to consider the validity of such claims, supporting documentary evidence to the work done, the reasons justifying the work and the cost of such work, are essential.
23: The proposed Defendants deny that this application represents a fishing expedition, as suggested by the proposed Claimants' solicitors. The documentation requested is simply that which is required to fully evaluate the proposed Claimants' claim, and justification for decisions made during the clean-up procedure. The proposed Defendants are simply attempting to be proactive in the disposal of this case by seeking documentation which they have a right to review at an early stage, rather than at a later stage when proceedings have been issued and costs have increased."
Standard Disclosure
Desirability
Discretion