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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Strang and Ors v de Bourbon des Deux Siciles [2020] JRC 178 (07 September 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2020/2020_178.html Cite as: [2020] JRC 178 |
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Striking out - application to strike out the Defendant's Counterclaim
Before : |
T. J. Le Cocq, Esq., Bailiff |
Between |
Ian Strang, Ashley Hoy, Nigel Pearmain & Others |
Plaintiffs |
And |
Defendant |
Advocate A. D. Hoy for the Plaintiffs.
Advocate H. B. Mistry for the Defendant.
judgment
the bailiff:
1. This is an application by Ian Strang, Ashley Hoy, Nigel Pearmain and others, practising as Voisin Advocates, Solicitors and Notaries Public ("the Plaintiffs") against Camilla de Bourbon des Deux Siciles ("the Defendant") seeking to strike out the Defendant's counterclaim pursuant to Rule 6/13(1)(a) of the Royal Court Rules 2004.
2. Rule 6/13(1)(a) of the Royal Court Rules 2004 is in the following terms:-
3. Sub-paragraph (2) of the same Rule provides:-
4. The Plaintiffs' action against the Defendant is for unpaid fees incurred whilst the Plaintiffs were retained by the Defendant as her legal advisers in and about an application to the Court of Appeal that resulted in the Judgment in BNP Paribas Jersey Trust Corporation Limited and Others v Crociani and Others [2018] JCA 136A ("the Court of Appeal Judgment"). The general background to the case in which the Plaintiffs acted for the Defendant can be found in the Court of Appeal's Judgment at paragraphs 2 - 10 and I do not propose to set it out in this Judgment.
5. The background with regard to the Plaintiffs' claim in this case can be briefly stated. In or around October 2017 the Plaintiffs were instructed by the Defendant to act for her in connection with a trust claim. In that claim the Royal Court had held, amongst other things, that the Defendant had acquiesced in or assisted in the breach of trust by her mother by which various sums were transferred out of a trust known as the Grand Trust as, in effect, part of a course of conduct which deprived the Defendant's sister of access to the family's wealth.
6. The Defendant appealed to the Court of Appeal. That Appeal gave rise to the Court of Appeal Judgment. The hearing in the Court of Appeal took place between the 26th of February 2018 and the 1st March 2018. Advocate Ashley Hoy of the Plaintiffs ("Advocate Hoy") had conduct of the Defendant's case.
7. On the 20th February 2018, the court was informed that Advocate Hoy had been taken into hospital and that there may be difficulty with his recovery in time to deal with the Defendant's appeal scheduled to take place during the following week. On the 21st February 2018 it was confirmed that Advocate Hoy would be unable to appear. The Plaintiffs were unable to offer or secure the services of alternate counsel to appear in his stead. Accordingly, at the hearing, the Defendant was unrepresented.
8. The Court of Appeal Judgment considers how the court approached these circumstances. At paragraph 174 of the Court of Appeal Judgment it says this:-
9. It is inherent in those statements that whereby the Court of Appeal determined that any disadvantage to the Defendant in not being represented was outweighed by the substantial disadvantage to other parties in any adjournment of the case, nonetheless the Defendant did at least suffer some potential disadvantage at least by her lack of representation which the Court of Appeal sought to address by dealing with the matter in the manner that is set out above.
10. The instant proceedings began by the Plaintiffs' summons of the 20th June 2019 and particulars of claim were filed followed by an answer and counterclaim filed on the part of the Defendant, and a reply and answer to the counterclaim.
11. During the course of a hearing for directions in this matter on the 28th October 2019, the Plaintiffs' alleged that the counterclaim filed by the Defendant on the 19th July 2019 ("the Counterclaim"), was liable to be struck out for, in summary, failing adequately to plead a case against the Plaintiffs. By Act of Court of the 28th October 2019 at paragraph 5, the Master ordered, amongst other things:-
"The Defendant further by close of business on Friday 29th November 2019 shall provide particulars of paragraph 22 of her answer and counterclaim dated 19th July 2019, identifying all facts and matters relied upon as to why a lack of representation was detrimental to the Defendants' appeal, including what loss this caused to the Defendant."
12. As a consequence a further document entitled "Further Information" was filed by the Defendant on the 29th of November 2019 ("the November Pleading").
13. It is the Plaintiffs' case before me that, taken together, neither the Counterclaim nor the November Pleading disclose a claim.
14. This matter has been decided at the request of both parties on the papers. As a preliminary point, however, the Defendant relying on Rule 6/13(2) set out above, objected to the use of by the Plaintiffs of the Court of Appeal Judgment. It was argued that, in accordance with authority, as no evidence could be admitted in an application of this nature, the facts pleaded by the Defendant should be taken as correct for my purposes and the Court of Appeal Judgment cannot be used to support the Plaintiffs' case. This would be to go beyond the pleadings, so it is argued, and would be to admit evidence.
15. I do not agree. Where there is a judgment of the Court of Appeal that arose out of the very substance of the this case and in which the Court of Appeal dealt with some of the aspects of the complaints in these proceedings it would to my mind be unrealistic for me to treat the Court of Appeal Judgment as if it did not exist. To the extent the Court of Appeal said what it said and did what it did, there is no issue of fact that would need to be determined by the Jurats. It is part of the procedural story and, so it seems to me, can be considered in that context.
16. I do not, therefore, exclude reference to the Court of Appeal Judgment as is apparent from the references above and below. However, I must be mindful of the fact that the Defendant would dispute some of the determinations made by the Court of Appeal and undoubtedly may lay some of those determinations at the door of her lack of representation by the Plaintiffs.
17. As I have already stated the Defendant's claim is set out in the Counterclaim and the November Pleading. The essence of the case as pleaded in the Counterclaim is that:-
(i) the Defendant wished to appeal against the judgement of the Royal Court;
(ii) it was an express or an implied term of the Agreement between the Defendant and the Plaintiffs that the Plaintiffs would provide full legal services (which included representation for a hearing before the Court of Appeal);
(iii) Advocate Hoy failed to attend and the Plaintiffs sent no alternative representation;
(iv) the lack of representation was detrimental to the Defendant's appeal;
(v) The Court of Appeal Judgment went against the Defendant.
18. At paragraph 26 of the Counterclaim, the Defendant says that details as to quantum would be provided but set a minimum of €2m in connection with an appeal to the Privy Council.
19. It was to the allegation that a lack of representation was detrimental to her appeal that the Master made the Order on 28th October 2019 set out at paragraph 11 above.
20. The November Pleading in essence:-
(i) States that the Defendant discussed with Advocate Hoy in September 2019 the nature of his instructions which were to set aside a disclosure order and to appeal or to seek clarification in respect of a particular point in the Royal Court proceedings;
(ii) States that Advocate Hoy, in an email, agreed to cap costs on those two matters in the sum of £200,000;
(iii) Suggests that it was an express term between the Defendant and the Plaintiffs in relation to the appeal/clarification of the Royal Court proceedings that the Plaintiffs would advise, prepare and represent the Defendant in the Court of Appeal. The Defendant makes a reference to an email from the Plaintiff dated 21 February 2018, concerning at the representation of the Defendant by the Plaintiff in the Court of Appeal in the following terms:-
"while in England, our client might well be expected to brief alternative Counsel, there is, of course, a large pool of QCs available. That is not quite the same in Jersey. While there are a number of Advocates at Voisin (not all are in the Litigation Department) and they simply do not have the experience of Court of Appeal matters that Ashley enjoys. You will be aware of this from your own personal experience.
I am therefore not in a position to offer up alternative Counsel at this late stage".
This, so the Defendant asserts, is an acceptance that representation in the Court of Appeal was something that the Plaintiffs' were engaged to provide;
(iv) States that no disclosure has been provided by Advocate Hoy as to his medical condition and therefore the Defendant avers that it was not as serious as described and this goes to the heart of the terms that she has pleaded.
(v) Asserts the Plaintiffs owed a number of duties to exercise care, skill and diligence including being able to provide advice and representation at court hearings, not to place themselves in a position where they could not provide representation; to act at all times in the Defendant's best interest and in the event the Plaintiffs could not provide representation to secure a suitable alternative. The Defendant alleges breaches of those duties.
21. The alleged breach of duties are particularised at paragraph 14 of the November Pleading and all of those particulars relate to the failure, as alleged, by the Plaintiffs to provide legal representation to the Defendant in the Court of Appeal.
22. At paragraph 15 of the November Pleading, the Defendant indicates that she is entitled to:-
"(i) repayment by the Plaintiff of the costs of and associated with the loss a chance or similar of the Court of Appeal Hearing;
(ii) repayment by the Plaintiff of the costs of and associated with the appeal to the Privy Council ... Had there been representation at the Court of Appeal Hearing, it is averred that matters would have been clarified and arguments tested by the Judges of Appeal;
(iii) in the alternative, equitable compensation ...;
(iv) interest on the costs of and associated costs pursuing the appeal to the Privy Council, on an equitable compensation, at such equitable rate or rates as the Court thinks fit".
23. At paragraphs 16 and 17 of the November Pleading, the Defendant pleads negligence and particularises that negligence as a failure by the Plaintiffs to take all necessary steps to protect her interests, failure to follow her instructions meaningfully to apply to adjourn the Court of Appeal Hearing and/or failure to advise the Defendant to make an application to appeal the decision of the Court of Appeal; and failing to ensure that there was adequate staffing in place to deal with the possibility of illness.
24. Furthermore, the Defendant pleads particulars of loss and damage flowing from the consequence of Advocate Hoy's failure to attend the Court of Appeal Hearing and cites as particulars the fact that the Court of Appeal found that the Camilla Trust was "virtually distributed" and therefore the Defendant's interest in the said Trust was paid out - a loss that she quantifies in the sum of US$105,275,090.52 and the legal costs incurred in applying for leave to the Privy Council. She also asserts that the Court of Appeal made adverse findings of fact against her and heard no oral evidence or submissions.
25. It is correct that the Court of Appeal Judgment contains a number of findings against the Defendant.
26. At paragraph 30 the Court said:-
27. At paragraph 31 the Court said:-
28. At paragraph 46 the Court said:-
29. At paragraph 47 the Court of Appeal said:-
30. At paragraph 48 the Court said:
31. At paragraph 49 the Court said:-
32. At paragraph 190 of the Court of Appeal Judgment, reference is made to paragraphs 431 and 444 of the Royal Court's Judgment that "show that [Camilla] had the requisite degree of knowledge in relation to the breaches of trust of BNP Jersey to justify a defence of acquiescence against her, whether or not she thought that Madame Crociani was through the foundation a beneficiary of the Grand Trust."
33. In essence the Plaintiffs' argument before me is that the November Pleading does not improve upon the Counterclaim and that taken together they do not disclose a reasonable cause of action or defence because they do not identify any loss. It is argued that the Defendant is seeking to re-litigate matters that are the subject of the Court of Appeal's Judgment.
34. In particular, the Plaintiff points out that the Judgment of the Royal Court of 7th October 2019 (BNP Paribas Trust Company v de Bourbon des Deux Siciles [2019] JRC 199) where at paragraph 19, Clyde-Smith, Commissioner, said:-
35. This demonstrates, so the Plaintiffs assert, that proceedings commenced by BNP had nothing to do with the findings made in the Court of Appeal Judgment. In terms of the potential of the Court of Appeal to hear more evidence, the Plaintiffs refer to paragraph 190 of the Court of Appeal Judgment which says:-
36. The Plaintiffs assert that the protections afforded by the Court of Appeal protected the Defendant's interests.
37. In essence, the Plaintiffs argue that the Counterclaim and November Pleadings do not plead how it is the Plaintiff's failure to appear for the Defendant, having filed the various documents ordered in the Court of Appeal's directions, in fact caused any loss to the Defendant. In their skeleton argument the Plaintiffs argue that neither the Counterclaim nor November Pleading asserts or identifies the conclusions or findings of the Court of Appeal that caused loss, the conclusions that were wrongful, and why they were wrong; the conclusions that are wrong as a result or consequence of the Plaintiffs' actions or inactions; or the actions or inactions of the Plaintiffs that caused the Court of Appeal to make any wrongful conclusions or findings.
38. The findings in the Court of Appeal's Judgment were to the effect that the Defendant failed to allege breach of trust against her Trustees and could not now do so. She was guilty of dishonestly assisting her mother to remove assets from the Grand Trust and to keep them from her sister. She had acquiesced the breaches of trust and therefore her Trust was deemed to be distributed to her.
39. In these circumstances the Plaintiffs assert that actionable loss is an essential element of the cause of action that the Defendant brings, she cannot or has not pleaded actionable loss and accordingly her Counterclaim must fail. She cannot establish any loss that arose as a direct consequence of the Plaintiff's actions or inactions, so it is alleged.
40. Much of the Defendant's arguments are, quite naturally, based on the contents of her Counterclaim and the November Pleading. The Defendant's main position is that the Plaintiffs must accept or have accepted that failing to attend the Court of Appeal was negligent and any dispute on causation of loss can only be resolved by reference to the facts of the case and therefore her case should not be struck out. Alternatively, she says that the strike out should be adjourned until after full discovery has been given.
41. I pause to observe that given that the Plaintiff's claim before me is proceeding under Rule 6/13(1)(a) then it must proceed without reference to evidence which might flow following discovery. The Defendant is protected however, by the high threshold that has to be met. The Defendant's case must be unsustainable on the pleadings for the Plaintiffs strike out to succeed.
42. The approach by the Court to striking out particularly under Rule 6/13(a) is well understood and has been fairly characterised by the Defendant in her skeleton argument.
43. The jurisdiction to strike out is a summary one, and is limited to plain and obvious cases. It is not appropriate on an application to strike out under Rule 6/13(a) to conduct a protracted examination of the facts of the matter and all documents relating to it, in order to establish whether there is a reasonable cause of action or defence;
44. The Court should give reasonable latitude to a pleading before holding that it should be struck out. In re Esteem Settlement UJ [2000] 150 the Court of Appeal said:
45. A pleading may be struck out as disclosing no reasonable cause of action or defence pursuant to Rule 6/13(1)(a) if the factual allegations made in the pleading would be insufficient to satisfy the Court to grant the relief sought. A reasonable cause of action or defence is one with some chance of success.
46. In the recent English case of Office Depot International (UK) Limited v UBS Asset Management (UK) Limited [2018] EWHC 1494 which involved, inter alia, an application to strike out, O'Farrell J referred with approval to the case of Global Asset Capital, Inc and another v Aabar Block SARL and others [2017] EWCA Civ 37 and the judgment of Hamblin LJ in which he stated that:
47. In Summers v Fairclough Homes [2012] UKSC 26, Lord Clarke giving the speech for the Supreme Court, said this:
48. There is therefore a high hurdle to be overcome by the Plaintiffs in seeking an order to strike out under Rule 6/13(1)(a).
49. The Defendant also refers to cases covering claims against legal advisers. In the English Court of Appeal's case of Channon v Lindley [2002] EWCA Civ 353, the Plaintiff claimed that due to the solicitor's negligence his case had been presented in a weaker way at trial than it should have been. The Plaintiff sued his solicitors claiming that if his claim had been better presented he would have achieved a better result. Potter LJ cited the following:
50. Of course it may be observed that this case was clearly one in which it was accepted that there was "uncertainty" relating to what the district judge would have ordered in the case had it been "properly presented to him". In the context of this case it would be necessary to establish that there is some prospect that, had Advocate Hoy represented the Defendant in the Court of Appeal, the outcome would have been better for the Defendant. Of course, in looking at that it is necessary to take the Defendant's pleadings at face value.
51. In Feakins v Bairstow [2005] EWHC QB 1931, the Court considered the correct approach to causation and damages when the Plaintiff contends that the case was not presented as well at trial as it could have been. The Court said:
52. The Defendant argues that the question for me is whether or not a reasonable cause of action is disclosed in the Counterclaim and the November Pleading. It is argued that the cause of action is clear in as much as it was alleged to be a breach of contract and negligence.
53. The Defendant also argues that causation and loss are inevitably fact sensitive issues and will require an understanding of what happened at the trial, what was said or submitted at the Hearing that Advocate Hoy did not attend, what should have happened and what on the Defendant's argument would or should have been submitted. There would need to be evidence as to what the likely or indeed possible effect would have been should the matter had been dealt with with Advocate Hoy in attendance and whether or not a chance has been lost because the case was not presented in the way that it should have been.
54. In my Judgment, the cumulative effect of the Counterclaim and the November Pleading is not satisfactory. It seems to me that there may well be, should the matter proceed, scope to request further and better particulars over and above those already provided in the November Pleadings.
55. However, that is not what I have to consider. I must consider whether any arguable case is made out on the pleading.
56. It seems to be at least arguable that the Defendant has suffered a detriment as a result of not being represented in Court by Advocate Hoy or another competent advocate fielded in his stead. It has an air of unreality for the Plaintiffs to suggest that the absence of Advocate Hoy could have no possible detriment to the Defendant. It is not suggested that the Defendant was advised to dispense with Advocate Hoy's services and simply rely on written submissions before, he became ill. The Defendant was forced into the unwelcome position of being unrepresented through no fault of her own.
57. It is in my judgment at least arguable then that the Defendant has a case in negligence and/or breach of contract because of the failure of Advocate Hoy to attend (for reasons for which I accept he was not responsible) or for someone to be fielded either from Voisin or employed as an agent at no additional expense to the Defendant in his stead.
64. I do not suggest that there is not a possibility that the Plaintiffs might apply again to strike out the Counterclaim once it is fully pleaded on whatever basis may then be appropriate. I do not think that it is necessary to reserve the matter to myself should the Master deem it appropriate that he deal with it.