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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> GBM Minerals Engineering Consultants Ltd v GB Minerals Holdings Ltd [2015] EWHC 2954 (TCC) (21 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2015/2954.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2954 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Rolls Building London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
GBM Minerals Engineering Consultants Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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GB Minerals Holdings Limited |
Defendant |
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Richard Slade QC and Duncan McCombe (instructed by Farrer & Co LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 9/10/2015
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Mr Justice Fraser:
Introduction
Summary of the case
"The Feasibility Study Agreement was varied by written agreement between the parties in respect of additional services to be provided by the Claimant to the Defendant the consequential increase in the costs to the Defendant of the Claimant performing its duties under the feasibility Study Agreement. Agreed 'Variation Orders' included those dated 5 May 2010; 25 March 2011; 15 April 2011; 10 July 2011; 29 September 2011; 11 November 2011; 2 December 2011; 17 January 2012; 12 March 2012; 12 May 2012; 15 May 2012; 26 May 2012; 8 July 2012; 31 July 2012; 15 October 2012; 30 October 2012; and 18 July 2013."
These are the 17 Variation Orders.
The Claimant's application to amend the Particulars of Claim and the Reply and Defence to Counterclaim
"The Claimant performed engineering consulting services for the Defendant pursuant to the Feasibility Study Agreement as varied by the variation orders"
With
"The Claimant performed engineering consulting services for the Defendant pursuant to the Feasibility Study Agreement as varied by the parties from time to timevariation orders".
"The emails to which I have referred make plain beyond doubt that, far from these Variation Orders being created over a two year period, as and when the variation instructions were purportedly given, the Variation Orders were all created after the event in November 2012 (with VO017 being created in February 2013). Furthermore, they were created by the contractor seeking additional payment rather than the employer instructing the work; and they were given the impression of contemporaneous authenticity by signatures which had been falsely dated by reference to random dates over the preceding 18 months."
The defendant's application to amend its defence and counterclaim
1. A total of approximately US$2.15 million was paid by the defendant to the claimant over a period of about six months, between March and September 2011.
2. Those payments were matched, a few days later in each case, by a corresponding payment in the same amount to a bank account in Cyprus. The total of those payments is £1.48 million.
3. That bank account was either the account of, or was controlled by, Mr Laing.
4. The payments to Mr Laing were made by the claimant without knowledge of the defendant, and/or received by Mr Laing in breach of his fiduciary duties owed to the defendant as a director.
5. They were therefore secret payments.
6. Those payments were entitled to be recovered by the defendant from the claimant by way of counterclaim in these proceedings.
The principles to be applied when applying to make amendments
"15. In my view, the traditional approach outlined by Peter Gibson LJ in Cobbold v Greenwich LBC (1999 unreported), to the effect that "[a]mendments in general ought to be allowed so that the real dispute between the parties can be adjudicated upon provided that any prejudice to the other party or parties caused by the amendment can be compensated for in costs " is no longer the right starting point. Indeed it is arguable that it never was: in the earlier Court of Appeal decision of Worldwide Corporation Ltd v GPT Ltd and another [1998] WL 1120764, Waller LJ stressed that a payment in costs was not adequate compensation for the other party being 'mucked around' at the last moment. Subsequently, in Savings and Investment Bank Ltd (in liquidation) v Fincken [2003] EWCA Civ 1630; [2004] 1 WLR 667, Rix LJ noted that Worldwide was authority for the proposition that "the older view that amendments should be allowed as of right if they could be compensated in costs without injustice had made way for a view which paid greater regard to all the circumstances which are now summed up in the overriding objective".
16. The subsequent decision of the Court of Appeal in Swain-Mason and Others v Mills and Reeve LLP [2011] EWCA Civ 14; [2011] 1 WLR 2735 also stressed that, when dealing with very late amendments, the court should be less ready than in former times to grant a late application to amend. Moreover, Lloyd LJ said that, when considering the competing arguments of prejudice, the prejudice to the amending party in not being able to advance its amended case was a relevant factor, but was only one of the factors to be taken into account in reaching a conclusion. It was also stressed that a late amendment cannot be insufficient or deficient. And at paragraph 72 of his judgment, Lloyd LJ said:
" a heavy onus lies on a party seeking to make a very late amendment to justify it, as regards his own position, that of the other parties to the litigation, and that of other litigants in other cases before the court."
17. In Andrew Brown and Others v Innovatorone PLC and Others [2011] EWHC 3221 (Comm), Hamblen J said that parties had a legitimate expectation that trial dates would be met and they would not be put back or delayed without good reason. At paragraph 14 of his judgment, the judge set out some of the likely factors that would be involved in striking a fair balance. They were:
"(1) the history as regards the amendment and the explanation as to why it is being made late;
(2) the prejudice which will be caused to the applicant if the amendment is refused;
(3) the prejudice which will be caused to the resisting party if the amendment is allowed;
(4) whether the text of the amendment is satisfactory in terms of clarity and particularity."
18. As part of the Jackson reforms to the CPR, the overriding objective, which is the starting-point for any consideration by the court of late amendments, was amended. It now expressly provides that the court must deal with cases "justly and at proportionate cost". Proportionality is vital, not only to this application, but to the vast majority of applications to amend late. For those reasons, I pay particular attention to four more recent cases concerned with amendments, the majority of which post-date this change to the overriding objective. They are:
(a) Archlane Ltd v Johnson Controls Ltd [2012] EWHC B12 (TCC), in which Edwards-Stuart J said that "to the extent that the First Defendant will suffer prejudice by the refusal of this amendment, which I accept is a clear possibility, it seems to me clear also that it is very substantially the author of that prejudice".
(b) Hague Plant Ltd v Hague and Others [2014] EWCA Civ 1609, in which Briggs LJ said:
"32. In that succinct passage the judge clearly distinguished between the "very late" amendment cases such as Swain-Mason where the risk to a trial date may mean that the lateness of the application to amend will of itself cause the balance to be heavily loaded against the grant of permission, and "late" amendments in which the consequence of the large scale reformulation of the Particulars of Claim, after the completion of Defences and Part 18 exchanges, will risk undermining work already done on response to the original Particulars of Claim, and causing a duplication of cost and effort. It is evident, for example from paragraph 60 and 61, and elsewhere in the judgment, that it was this aspect of lateness, namely the consequence that, if permitted, the amendments would cause existing work to be wasted and substantial further work and expense incurred, that weighed in the judge's mind.
33. I consider that the judge was entitled to approach the relevance of lateness in this way. Lateness is not an absolute but a relative concept. As Mr. Randall put it, a tightly focussed, properly explained and fully particularised short amendment in August may not be too late, whereas a lengthy, ill-defined, unfocussed and unexplained amendment proffered in the previous March may be too late. It all depends upon a careful review of the nature of the proposed amendment, the quality of the explanation for its timing, and a fair appreciation of its consequences in terms of work wasted and consequential work to be done."
The court upheld the decision of the first instance judge, HHJ Behrens, to refuse the amendments.
(c) Bourke and another v Favre and another [2015] EWHC 277 (Ch) in which Nugee J refused the amendments some months before trial because of the 'significant pressure' that having to deal with the new claim would put on the defendants, whilst there was no corresponding pressure on the claimants because they had already prepared their evidence with this new claim in mind. In that case, a second action was considered inevitable, and Nugee J indicated that such fresh proceedings would not be caught by the rule in Henderson v Henderson.
(d) Wani LLP v Royal Bank of Scotland PLC and another [2015] EWHC 1181 (Ch) in which Henderson J refused amendments which neither side said necessitated the adjournment of the trial if they were allowed. He rejected the suggestion that it made a difference that the application was being made two months before the trial, citing the passage in Hague Plant referred to above. He also applied the approach in Brown, although he dealt with the four points in a slightly different sequence. As to lateness, he found that the amendments could have been made much earlier than they were, and they lacked proper clarity and particularity.
19. In summary, therefore, I consider that the right approach to amendments is as follows:
(a) The lateness by which an amendment is produced is a relative concept (Hague Plant). An amendment is late if it could have been advanced earlier, or involves the duplication of cost and effort, or if it requires the resisting party to revisit any of the significant steps in the litigation (such as disclosure or the provision of witness statements and expert's reports) which have been completed by the time of the amendment.
(b) An amendment can be regarded as 'very late' if permission to amend threatens the trial date (Swain-Mason), even if the application is made some months before the trial is due to start. Parties have a legitimate expectation that trial dates will be met and not adjourned without good reason (Brown).
(c) The history of the amendment, together with an explanation for its lateness, is a matter for the amending party and is an important factor in the necessary balancing exercise (Brown; Wani). In essence, there must be a good reason for the delay (Brown).
(d) The particularity and/or clarity of the proposed amendment then has to be considered, because different considerations may well apply to amendments which are not tightly-drawn or focused (Swain-Mason; Hague Plant; Wani).
(e) The prejudice to the resisting parties if the amendments are allowed will incorporate, at one end of the spectrum, the simple fact of being 'mucked around' (Worldwide), to the disruption of and additional pressure on their lawyers in the run-up to trial (Bourke), and the duplication of cost and effort (Hague Plant) at the other. If allowing the amendments would necessitate the adjournment of the trial, that may be an overwhelming reason to refuse the amendments (Swain-Mason).
(f) Prejudice to the amending party if the amendments are not allowed will, obviously, include its inability to advance its amended case, but that is just one factor to be considered (Swain-Mason). Moreover, if that prejudice has come about by the amending party's own conduct, then it is a much less important element of the balancing exercise (Archlane)."
Timing of the applications
"The applicant [i.e. the claimant] invites the Court of Appeal to consider when 'run of the mill deliberate false statements in pleadings' merit committal proceedings; skeleton argument para. 32(1). I do not accept that deliberate false statements in pleadings verified by a statement of truth are ever 'run of the mill'. The sooner that this notion is dispelled, the better."
It was said by the claimant, in an attempt to dilute the effect of the permission to commit Mr Short, that there were only three parts of the Reply to which this related and (effectively) these parts were not that important. That is rather to miss the point, and the claimant seemed to continue this approach concerning the secret payments to the bank account in Cyprus controlled by Mr Laing.
Prejudice
Conclusion
Note 1 Footnote 1 to the judgment of Coulson J [Back] Note 5 Feasibility Services Agreement [Back]