![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Ndole Assets Ltd v Designer M&E Services UK Ltd [2017] EWHC 1148 (TCC) (18 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2017/1148.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 1148 (TCC), [2017] 1 WLR 4367, [2017] WLR(D) 335 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2017] 1 WLR 4367] [View ICLR summary: [2017] WLR(D) 335] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Ndole Assets Limited |
Claimant/Respondent |
|
- and - |
||
Designer M&E Services UK Limited |
Defendant/Applicant |
____________________
for the Claimant/Respondent
Mr Paul Darling QC (instructed by Clarke Willmott LLP)
for the Defendant/Applicant
Hearing date: 3 May 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Coulson :
1. INTRODUCTION
2. ISSUE 1: WAS SERVICE UNLAWFUL?
"Meaning of "reserved legal activity" and "legal activity"
(1) In this Act "reserved legal activity" means—
(a) the exercise of a right of audience;
(b) the conduct of litigation;
(c) reserved instrument activities;
(d) probate activities;
(e) notarial activities;
(f) the administration of oaths.
(2) Schedule 2 makes provision about what constitutes each of those activities."
"(a) the issuing of proceedings before any court in England and Wales,
(b) the commencement, prosecution and defence of such proceedings, and
(c) the performance of any ancillary functions in relation to such proceedings (such as entering appearances to actions)."
"Entitlement to carry on a reserved legal activity
(1) The question whether a person is entitled to carry on an activity which is a reserved legal activity is to be determined solely in accordance with the provisions of this Act.
(2) A person is entitled to carry on an activity ("the relevant activity") which is a reserved legal activity where—
(a) the person is an authorised person in relation to the relevant activity, or
(b) the person is an exempt person in relation to that activity.
(3) Subsection (2) is subject to section 23 (transitional protection for non-commercial bodies).
(4) Nothing in this section or section 23 affects section 84 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 (c. 33) (which prohibits the provision of immigration advice and immigration services except by certain persons)."
"43. As was stated in Factortame, section 20 must be given a "restricted ambit" because of its penal nature. What does this mean? Where is the line to be drawn? Does the prohibition go any further than what is expressly prohibited? It is common ground that it does not extend to what might be termed purely clerical or mechanical activities such as photocopying documents, preparing bundles, delivering documents to opposing parties and the court and so on. Mr Speaight submits that none of the following activities, if conducted by an unqualified person, would be in breach of sections 20 or 22:
'(a) Delivering to a court office a claim form, appeal notice, application or the like, provided it has been signed by the party himself.
(b) Typing or printing out an appeal notice, statement of case or other formal court document, which has been drafted by a barrister.
(c) Service of a claim form or other documents.
(d) Taking a statement from a prospective witness.
(e) Correspondence with the opposing party.
(f) Preparing a bundle of documents for use in a court hearing.
(g) Drafting instructions to a barrister.
(h) Sitting behind a barrister during a hearing to provide administrative assistance.'
44. He described these as "administrative support". It is to be noted that we were shown no statute or rule which prohibits an unqualified person from giving legal advice. Mr Speaight accepts that discussing the law with counsel and/or giving legal advice to the client in connection with the litigation is not acting as a solicitor. Since such conduct by unqualified persons is not prohibited, it seems to us that, on an application of the Piper Double Glazing test, it does not amount to acting as a solicitor. Mr Drabble questions whether some of the items in Mr Speaight's list would normally amount to mere administrative support: for example, correspondence with the opposing party which, he submits, is an integral part of the conduct of litigation. Mr Drabble says that it is a question of degree whether correspondence goes beyond what may fairly be described as administrative support for the party.
45. This is a difficult area. There is no statutory (and so far as we are aware no other) definition of "acting as a solicitor". The phrase "administrative support" may seem to be a convenient label to use to refer to those activities which do not amount to acting as a solicitor, but it is not particularly illuminating shorthand for the only activities that may be carried out by an unqualified person on a proper application of the Piper Double Glazing test."
"53. Depending on the context, the word 'proceedings' may have a very wide ambit (see Callery v Gray (No1) [2001] EWCA Civ 1117 at [54]; [2001] 1 WLR 2112; and, for an extreme example, see Crosbie v Munroe [2003] EWCA Civ 350 at [34]). In the present context the word undoubtedly includes ancillary applications and appeals in the course of litigation. Only a litigant in person or an authorised litigator may issue proceedings. But what is the scope of the right "to perform any ancillary functions in relation to proceedings (such as entering appearances to actions)"? The background material to the 1990 Act that we have been shown sheds no light on the meaning of these words. Mr Drabble and Mr Carr rely on the statutory objective and the general principle stated in section 17 in support of the submission that the words should not be given a narrow meaning. They submit that there are powerful policy reasons why litigation which is not being conducted by litigants in person should be conducted by authorised litigators. The scheme introduced by the 1990 Act was intended to make provision for new and better ways of conducting litigation and a wider choice of persons providing them "while maintaining the proper and efficient administration of justice". It is an essential part of the scheme that the enlargement of the class of persons available to conduct litigation is properly regulated.
54. We recognise the importance of these considerations. But the language of section 119 must be interpreted in accordance with the usual rules for statutory interpretation. These include that the starting point is that words should be given their plain and natural meaning. It is also important to bear in mind the penal nature of section 70. If a person purports to exercise the right to conduct litigation when he is not entitled to do so, he commits an offence. This is not directed at the person who pretends that he is entitled to exercise the right to conduct litigation: that is the subject of the separate offence created by section 70(3). Section 70(1) is directed at the person who, whatever his state of mind, actually issues proceedings or performs any ancillary functions in relation to proceedings when he is not in fact entitled to do so.
55. If Parliament had intended to introduce a broad definition of the right to conduct litigation, it could have defined it as the right "to issue and conduct proceedings before the court". That would have been all-embracing and the second limb of the definition that was adopted would have been unnecessary. Instead, Parliament decided to limit the first limb of the definition to the initial formal step in proceedings, namely their issue. It then added a second limb, which, if its meaning is ambiguous or otherwise unclear, should be construed narrowly.
56. The word "ancillary" indicates that it is not all functions in relation to proceedings that are comprised in the "right to conduct litigation". The usual meaning of "ancillary" is "subordinate". A clue to what was intended lies in the words in brackets "(such as entering appearances to actions)". These words show that it must have been intended that the ancillary functions would be formal steps required in the conduct of litigation. These would include drawing or preparing instruments within the meaning of section 22 of the 1974 Act and other formal steps. It is not necessary for the purposes of this case to decide the precise parameters of the definition of "the right to conduct litigation". It is unfortunate that this important definition is so unclear. But because there are potential penal implications, its very obscurity means that the words should be construed narrowly. Suffice it to say that we do not see how the giving of legal advice in connection with court proceedings can come within the definition. In our view, even if, as the Law Society submits, correspondence with the opposing party is in a general sense "an integral part of the conduct of litigation", that does not make it an "ancillary function" for the purposes of section 28."
"In this case Quigg Golden, having eventually received the issued claim form from the court, served it on the Defendant. I am prepared to assume that that constituted an act that it was not authorised to do and which was therefore unlawful. However, it is not the service of the issued claim form that was regularised by my judgment…"
3. ISSUE 2: SHOULD SUMMARY JUDGMENT BE GIVEN FOR MAINTENANCE/CHAMPERTY?
"There was a genuine commercial rationale for Sheldon's indebtedness to Ellme being assigned by Ellme to Ndole. Both Ellme and Ndole were entities wholly beneficially owned by me and it was in the interests of both companies and in my interests to have a business structure in which Ndole was Sheldon's creditor rather than Ellme. Following its assignment of Sheldon's debt to Ndole, Ellme ceased trading and subsequently ceased to exist."
Surprisingly, perhaps, no particulars are provided in order to make good any of the assertions in that paragraph.
"My Lords, I am afraid that, with respect, I cannot agree with the learned Master of the Rolls [1980] Q.B. 629, 657 when he said in the instant case that "The old saying that you cannot assign a 'bare right to litigate' is gone." I venture to think that that still remains a fundamental principle of our law. But it is today true to say that in English law an assignee who can show that he has a genuine commercial interest in the enforcement of the claim of another and to that extent takes an assignment of that claim to himself is entitled to enforce that assignment unless by the terms of that assignment he falls foul of our law of champerty, which, as has often been said, is a branch of our law of maintenance. For my part I can see no reason in English law why Credit Suisse should not have taken an assignment to themselves of Trendtex's claim against C.B.N. for the purpose of recouping themselves for their own substantial losses arising out of C.B.N.'s repudiation of the letter of credit upon which Credit Suisse were relying to refinance their financing of the purchases by Trendtex of this cement from their German suppliers."
"20. The shareholders in CAASL owned a company which had an existing business and had acquired what it considered to be a significant business opportunity. It considered that it had been wrongfully deprived of the possibility of making the most of that opportunity and launched these proceedings. At some stage, whether or not reluctantly is not altogether clear, the shareholders decided to sell the business as a going concern while retaining the benefit of the lawsuit. We are told that they had little choice, as the relocation of Bahamasair had taken much of the working capital needed to pursue the development. The price which they achieved for the business without the lawsuit was much lower than the value which, rightly or wrongly, they then put on the business with the benefit of the lawsuit. The transfer of the business made it quite clear that, while the transferee would do nothing to hinder the assignee from pursuing the claim, it wanted no part in the claim itself. The mechanism the shareholders chose to do this was to form another company to retain the claim. We do not know exactly why they chose to do it as a company rather than as individuals. Mr John Wilson, who has presented the case for Aerostar with skill, economy and charm, suggested that it may simply have been for convenience. They did, of course, retain the benefit of limited liability but the system is quite capable of protecting defendants from being pursued by worthless companies through the mechanism of requiring security for costs.
21. This was not wanton and officious intermeddling in another person's litigation for no good reason. It was simply the original owners retaining part of what they owned while disposing of the rest. There is nothing contrary to public policy in allowing Aerostar to pursue the claim against these defendants and no good reason why these defendants should be permitted to escape any liability that they may have. This is not, of course, to say that a shareholder will always have a genuine and substantial commercial interest in taking an assignment of the company's claims. To take an extreme example, for a minority shareholder to buy a substantial claim for a nominal sum in the hope of making a substantial profit may well be contrary to public policy. But that is not this case. Aerostar owned all the shares in CAASL and taken as a whole the transaction was a perfectly sensible business arrangement."
"56. As to Mr Vineall's submission that Mr Wilson's assignment and the Claim is or is on the brink of trafficking in litigation, I disagree. That phrase, as used in Trendtex, was attributed to a cause of action which was expected to be traded commercially between unconnected third parties as a commodity or, in the language the financial services industry, a product. In this case, the assignors are all connected with JEB; they all have a direct or indirect (through family) interest in rights equivalent or similar to the Rights; and, there is no evidence to suggest that JEB has attempted or will attempt to trade in the Rights or the Claim by further assignment. The conduct under attack in this case is a far cry from trafficking in litigation."
In my view, neither of these authorities develop nor extend the principles in Trendex and Massai.
4. THE WAY FORWARD