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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Travelers Insurance Company Ltd v Countrywide Surveyors Ltd [2010] EWHC 2455 (TCC) (06 September 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2010/2455.html Cite as: [2011] Lloyd's Rep IR 213, [2010] EWHC 2455 (TCC), [2010] CILL 2947, [2011] 1 All ER (Comm) 631 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
B e f o r e :
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TRAVELERS INSURANCE COMPANY LTD | Claimant | |
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COUNTRYWIDE SURVEYORS LTD | Defendant |
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Mr. Michael Soole QC (instructed by Countrywide Legal) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE COULSON:
A INTRODUCTION
B THE RELEVANT TERMS OF THE POLICY
"Underwriters will not exercise any right to avoid this insurance where it is alleged that there has been non-disclosure or misrepresentation of facts or untrue statements in the proposal forms, provided always that the assured shall establish to Underwriters' satisfaction that such alleged non-disclosure, misrepresentation or untrue statement was free of any fraudulent intent …
In the event of any dispute or disagreement between the Assured and Underwriters regarding the application of the Special Institution Conditions, such dispute or disagreement shall be referred by either party for arbitration to any person nominated by the President for the time being of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors or the Financial Ombudsman Service as appropriate."
C THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE SPECIAL INSTITUTION CONDITION
D CAN PRE-ACTION DISCLOSURE BE ORDERED CPR 31.16 IN A SITUATION WHETHER THE UNDERLYING DISPUTE WILL BE DECIDED IN ARBITRATION NOT IN THE HIGH COURT?
"On the application in accordance with rules of court of a person who appears to the High Court to be likely to be a party to subsequent proceedings in that court the High Court shall, in such circumstances as may be specified in the rules, have power to order a person who appears to the court to be likely to be a party to the proceedings and to be likely to have, or to have had, in his possession, custody or power any documents which are relevant to an issue arising, or likely to arise, out of that claim:
(a) to disclose whether those documents are in his possession, custody or power; and
(b) to produce such of those documents as are in his possession, custody or power to the applicant, or on such conditions as may be specified in the order …"
"I entirely accept the submission that a central and important purpose of the 1996 Act was to emphasise the importance of party autonomy and to restrict the role of the courts in the arbitral process. In particular, the Act was intended to ensure that the powers of the court should be limited to assisting the arbitral process and should not usurp or interfere with it."
In my judgment, it would be contrary to that policy to find that, in the absence of clear words, the court had the jurisdiction to make an order for potentially wide-ranging pre-action disclosure in an arbitration case.
"The High Court may by order, whether interlocutory or final, grant an injunction or appoint a receiver in all cases in which it appears to the court to be just and convenient to do so."
"67 Arbitrations that fall within the 1996 Act are the result of agreements between two (or possibly more) parties to resolve legal disputes through a private impartial tribunal. Such arbitrations are, by definition, consensual. As s.1(b) of the 1996 Act states, 'the parties should be free to agree how their disputes are resolved, subject only to such safeguards as are necessary in the public interest'. I have already noted that under the pre – 1996 Act regime, it was well established that the courts did not have a general supervisory power to intervene in arbitrations before an award was made, either by injunction or some other method. That remains the position. Section 1(c) of the Act is an express statutory warning to the courts not to intervene except as provided in Part 1 of the 1996 Act. That reflects the underlying principles of the 1996 Act of party autonomy and the minimum of interference in the arbitral process by the courts, at least before an award is made.
68 In my view the whole structure of Part 1 also suggests that the scope for the court to intervene by injunction before an award is made by arbitrators is very limited."
E SECTION 44(3) OF THE 1996 ACT
"(1) Unless otherwise agreed by the parties the court has, for the purposes of and in relation to arbitral proceedings, the same power of making orders about the matters listed below as it has for the purposes of and in relation to legal proceedings.
(2) Those matters are:
(a) the taking of the evidence of witnesses;
(b) the preservation of evidence;
(c) making orders relating to property which is the subject of the proceedings or as to which any question arises in the proceedings:
(i) for the inspection, photographing, preservation, custody or detention of the property; or
(ii) ordering that samples be taken from or any observation be made or experiment conducted upon the property and for that purpose authorising any person to enter any premises in the possession or control of a party to the arbitration;
(d) the sale of any goods the subject of the proceedings;
(e) the granting of an interim injunction or the appointment of a receiver.
(3) If the case is one of urgency the court may, on the application of a party or proposed party to the arbitral proceedings, make such orders as it thinks necessary for the purpose of preserving evidence or assets."
"18. I also take the view that, had it been the intention of the legislature to grant to those who are likely to be parties to arbitral proceedings similar ancillary assistance to that provided by s.33(2), it would have made express provision to that effect either within the Supreme Court Act or more probably within s.44(2) of the Arbitration Act 1996 …
20. … the powers with which the High Court has been endowed for the purpose of providing ancillary assistance in support of arbitral proceedings are, for present purposes, listed in s.44(2) of the Arbitration Act 1996, and I note, where the case is one of urgency, include a power 'for the purpose of preserving evidence or assets' pursuant to s.44(3). An application for pre-action disclosure does not come within the powers given to the court by ss.44(2) and (3), and, as The Tasman Spirit [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 525 also shows, where the power is not expressly given by the section, the court does not have a residual power to grant the relief sought."
F CONCLUSIONS
(a) The underlying dispute as to the possible misrepresentation and/or fraudulent intent as at May 2008 is the subject of a binding arbitration agreement;
(b) In those circumstances the court's powers to order pre-action disclosure are not exercisable. There is no jurisdiction.