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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Fleurose v Securities & Futures Authority Ltd. & Anor [2001] EWCA Civ 2015 (21st December, 2001)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/2015.html
Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 2015, [2002] IRLR 297

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Fleurose v Securities & Futures Authority Ltd. & Anor [2001] EWCA Civ 2015 (21st December, 2001)

Neutral Citation Number: [2001] EWCA Civ 2015
Case No: CO/988/2000

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HON. MR JUSTICE MORISON

Royal Courts of Justice
Strand,
London, WC2A 2LL
21st. December 2001

B e f o r e :

LORD JUSTICE SCHIEMANN
LORD JUSTICE CLARKE
and
MR. JUSTICE WALL

____________________


BERTRAND FLEUROSE
Appellant
- and -

THE SECURITIES & FUTURES AUTHORITY LTD.
-and –
THE DISCIPLINARY APPEAL TRIBUNAL OF THE SECURITIES & FUTURES AUTHORITY LTD.



1st
Respondent
2nd.
Respondent

____________________

(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)

____________________

ANTHONY SPEAIGHT Q.C. and JOHN PASSMORE (instructed by Lock & Malborough for the Appellant)
RICHARD GORDON Q.C. and MARTIN CHAMBERLAIN (instructed by Allen & Overy for the 1st. Respondent)

____________________

HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
____________________

Crown Copyright ©

    LORD JUSTICE SCHIEMANN: This is the judgment of the Court

  1. Bertrand Fleurose appeals against a judgment of Morison J. dismissing an application by him for Judicial Review of a decision of the Disciplinary Appeals Tribunal of the Securities and Futures Authority (the SFA”). The Disciplinary Appeals Tribunal (“the Appeals Tribunal”) had dismissed an appeal by M Fleurose against a decision of the Disciplinary Tribunal of the SFA. The Disciplinary Tribunal had found him guilty of improper conduct as a trader in securities during his employment with J.P.Morgan Securities Ltd. (“JPM”). He was suspended from acting as “a registered person” for two years and ordered to pay £175,000 towards the costs of the SFA.
  2. The attack mounted by him before Morison J had a number of bases. One was that the provisions of the European Convention on Human Rights had been offended by the way in which he had been treated. We need not concern ourselves with the others since the permission to appeal relates solely to the first.
  3. There is a possible preliminary point as to whether or not the Convention has any application in domestic law to the relevant events which took place before the coming into force of the Human Rights Act 1998. This raised points which are perhaps of some difficulty and which were not argued before us since both parties desired us to proceed on the assumption that the Convention did have such application. Since we conclude that Morison J was right to dismiss the application, essentially for the reasons which he gave in his careful judgment, we are content to decide this appeal on that assumption rather than that the parties should incur further expense arguing those difficult points.
  4. The background to the case is well set out in the following paragraphs of the judgment under appeal.
  5. “4. The applicant, was a Senior Cash Arbitrage Trader employed at the time by JP Morgan Securities Ltd. It is alleged that on 28 November 1997, with another, his immediate boss, he manipulated the FTSE 100 Index so as to ensure that JPM did not have to make a payment under a binary option. Under the option JPM were obliged to make a payment to the counter-party if both the FTSE 100 Index and the S & P 500 Index were higher at the end of the month than at the beginning. The S & P Index was significantly higher than it had been at its November opening, but by the end of November 28, the last trading day of that month, the FTSE 100 was closer to the ‘strike level’ of 4842.3; that is, the level above which payment would have to be made by JPM. At 4.10 p.m., the FTSE 100 stood at 4856.56 points, and at 4.29 p.m., 4869.856. The FTSE 100 closes at 4.30 p.m. and, during the last six seconds of trading, the Index dropped by 38.08 points to below the strike level. The binary option was ‘out of the money’ and JPM relieved of an obligation to pay approximately £475,500.

    6. The reason for the sudden fall in the Index just before close of business was immediately investigated by the London Stock Exchange [LSE], which concluded that it had stemmed from substantial sales by JPM in the cash market during the last ten minutes. JPM carried out their own investigation and acknowledged that the trading activities of its Equity Derivative Group, of which Mr. Fleurose was a member, had breached the provisions of paragraph 2.10 of the Rules of the LSE, which prohibits a member firm, such as JPM, from doing an act or engaging in a course of conduct the sole intention of which was to move the index value. As a result of this breach, JPM were fined £350,000 by the LSE. The applicant was not, at the material time, a member of the LSE, and, therefore, not within the LSE’s disciplinary reach.

    7. The regulatory authority, [the first respondent, the SFA] to whose jurisdiction both the applicant and his manager were subject, commenced disciplinary proceedings against each of them. The cases were heard, separately because there was, at that time, no power to conjoin them. The case against the manager was heard by a Disciplinary Tribunal over a period of 13 days between 16 March and 7 April 1999. The applicant gave evidence at that hearing, and, in due course, the Tribunal found that the two charges of misconduct had been proved, and the manager was also found no longer to be a fit and proper person to be registered by the SFA. The Tribunal concluded that the manager’s sole intention in ordering these sales to be effected by the applicant was to drive the Index down.

    8. Between 12 April and 4 May 1999, the charges against the applicant, which were in similar terms to those against his manager, were tried and he was found guilty of the two charges of misconduct; but the Tribunal refused to declare that he was unfit to retain his registration; and he was suspended and ordered to make a contribution towards the SFA’s costs. The charges brought against him were in this form:

    “THE SECURITIES AND FUTURES AUTHORITY LIMITED (“SFA”) pursuant to Rules 7-60 and 7-61 of SFA’s Rules, hereby institutes disciplinary proceedings against Mr. Bertrand Fleurose on the grounds that:

    A. He has committed that following acts of misconduct;

    (1) In breach of Principle 1 of the FSA’s Statements of Principle, Mr. Fleurose failed to observe high standards of integrity and fair dealing in his involvement in the trading activities of the Equity Derivatives Group of J P Morgan Securities Limited on 28th November 1997.

    (2) In breach of Principle 3 of the FSA’s Statement of Principle, Mr. Fleurose failed to observe high standards of market conduct in trading for J P Morgan Securities Limited on the London Stock Exchange on 28th November 1997.

    B. He has ceased to be fit and proper to be registered by SFA”

    There followed 11 pages of a document headed “Summary of Facts” giving extensive details of the case and evidence relied upon.

    9. The essence of the case against him was that although he acted on the orders of his manager, he knew the true purpose of what he was doing, and, under both his employment contract and the rules of the SFA it was his responsibility to refuse to carry out instructions which he knew to be unlawful and to refer the issue to the compliance officer.

    “His willing co-operation in effecting transactions solely designed to depress the Index and his failure to question his orders or to make any reference to the Compliance Department constituted the misconduct alleged against him.”

    10. The applicant accepted that it would have been improper for him to effect trades whose sole purpose was to manipulate the Index. His case was that he had no knowledge or suspicion that his manager was manipulating the market and thought that the deals he executed were legitimate deals to unwind a hedge in connection with the binary option. Thus, it was said, he had no knowledge or intent to act unlawfully; he was merely executing his superior’s instructions which he had no reason to believe were unlawful.

    11. The Tribunal, presided over by a QC sitting with a market man and an independent person, concluded that the applicant had participated in the sales.

    “in the knowledge that they were intended to depress the market below the strike level of the binary option”.

    In support of their conclusions, the Tribunal relied, amongst other matters, on a statement which the applicant had made very soon after the material events during the course of the LSE investigation. If what he was alleged to have said was said, then his case that he did not know the true purpose of his deals that afternoon became less than credible. Second, they relied on events which had taken place earlier in the afternoon which, as the SFA contended, showed that the applicant knew, at an early stage, of the plan to manipulate the Index. Third, they relied upon the evidence of a witness who described how she observed the traders especially the applicant, to be happy and celebrating at the close. Her evidence was contradicted by the applicant but the Tribunal preferred hers to his and noted that the applicant had taken a close interest in the effect that the sales were having on the Index.

    “If, as he says, he was simply unwinding a hedge, there would be no reason to follow these sales so closely.”

    And they rejected his explanation that it was merely “natural curiosity”, as unconvincing.

    “We are satisfied that, with the knowledge he had acquired earlier in the day, especially at the time of his second telephone conversation with SBC Warburg, Mr. Fleurose understood [his manager’s] objectives, which were to depress the FTSE to below the strike level of the binary option, if market conditions made this possible. Mr. Fleurose was clearly a willing participant. He made no attempt to dissuade [his manager] from pursuing this course; rather, he assisted with enthusiasms. The inevitable consequence was that we found Charges 1 and 2 proved against Mr. Fleurose.”

    14. For present purposes, it is relevant to note that it was not the appellant’s case that he knew that he was being asked to do something which was wrong, and, for one reason or another, either was not in a position to refuse to do what he was told, or to seek guidance from the compliance officer. Second, it was not suggested that the applicant did not know that manipulating the market to depress it below the strike level was improper.

    15. The Disciplinary Tribunal’s judgment on the charges and sentence dated 29 June and 12 July 1999 were the subject of appeal by both the applicant and the SFA. The applicant appealed his convictions on the two charges against him, and the SFA appealed the decision that the applicant was not unfit to be a registered person. The appeals were heard separately by the Disciplinary Appeal Tribunal. The applicant’s appeal was dismissed on 16 December 1999, and the SFA’s appeal was dismissed on 13 March 2000.

    The SFA

    16. The Financial Services Act 1986 [the 1986 Act] created a two tier system of regulation. The Securities and Investment Board Limited [SIB] was the principal body responsible for regulation of the financial services industry. It changed its name in 1997 to the Financial Services Authority [FSA]. The SIB/FSA were responsible for authorising and recognising the second tier authorities, typically, self regulating organisations [SROs] of which the SFA is one. The SROs had front line responsibility for particular sectors of the market., The SFA was created in 1991 as a result of the merger of two other SROs. It has brought into effect various rules which apply to its members by contract and which include rules covering the admission and expulsion of members and their conduct of investment business.

    17. No person is allowed by law to carry on investment business in the UK without being either an ‘authorised person’ or an ‘exempted person’. A member of an SRO is an ‘authorised person’ by virtue of his membership. The SFA exercises its regulatory powers over its members by enforcing rules which conform to the statutory requirements laid down in Schedule 2 to the 1986 Act. It is a requirement of the Act that the rules:

    “must be such as to secure that its members are fit and proper persons to carry on investment business;

    so far as they relate to the admission and expulsion of members are fair and reasonable and provide adequate provision for appeals;

    the carrying on of investment business must be such as afford an adequate level of protection for the investing public.”

    18. The SRO must have adequate arrangements in place for effective monitoring and enforcement of compliance with its rules and with the Statement of Principles. That Statement was issued by the SIB on 15 March 1990 under section 47A of the 1986 Act and the Principles

    “are intended to form a universal statement of the standard expected.”

    These Principles were adopted by the SFA. Two of them, in particular, are relevant to this case: Principle 1 “Integrity” which provides that

    “A firm should observe high standards of integrity and fair dealing.”

    And Principle 3 “Market Practice” which provides that

    “A firm should observe high standards of market conduct. It should also, to the extent endorsed for the purpose of this Principle, comply with any code or standard as in force from time to time and as it applies to the firm either according to its terms or by rulings made under it.”

    19. Under SFA rules, the Principles apply directly to registered individuals as well as to “firms”. The applicant became bound by them by completing an Application Form for Individual Registration. The Form, which must be fully completed, asks searching questions about the applicant under the heading “Good Reputation and character”. There are various grounds for being an exempted person, including proof of experience and the holding of an appropriate diploma. At the end of the form is a declaration which reads:

    “I declare that the information supplied is complete and correct and that I have read and understood SFA’s guidance and notes on fitness and propriety… I further declare and agree that in consideration for my admission to the Register(s) I shall, within the scope of my authority and duties within a member firm of SFA, commit no act or omission which places the firm in breach of any rule of SFA for the time being in force and I acknowledge and agree that I shall be fully bound by and subject to the rules of SFA for the time being in force, and as amended from time to time".

    20. Thus, it can be seen that no person may lawfully carry on investment business within the UK without being a registered person; and by becoming registered for this purpose every individual is bound by the rules of the SFA, which is the regulatory authority for this sector of the financial services industry. It is a criminal offence for a person to carry on business without registration; it is a disciplinary offence for a registered person to conduct such business in breach of the rules, The manifest purpose of the regulatory regime is to protect the investing public from traders who have either evaded the regulatory system or have failed to carry on their activities in accordance with the rules designed to give this protection.

  6. The relevant article of the Convention is article 6.
  7. Right to a fair trial.

    1. In the determination of his civil rights and obligations or of any criminal charge against him, everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law. Judgment shall be pronounced publicly but the press and public may be excluded from all or part of the trial in the interest of morals, public order or national security in a democratic society, where the interests of juveniles or the protection of the private life of the parties so require, or to the extent strictly necessary in the opinion of the court in special circumstances where publicity would prejudice the interests of justice.

    2. Everyone charged with a criminal offence shall be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law.

    3. Everyone charged with a criminal offence has the following minimum rights:

    (a) to be informed promptly, in a language which he understands and in detail of the nature and cause of the accusation against him;

    (b) to have adequate time and facilities for the preparation of his defence;

    (c) to defend himself in person or through legal assistance of his own choosing or, if he has not sufficient means to pay for legal assistance, to be given it free when the interests of justice so require;

    (d) to examine or have examined witnesses against him and to obtain the attendance and examination of witnesses on his behalf under the same conditions as witnesses against him;

    (e) to have the free assistance of an interpreter if he cannot understand or speak the language used in court.”

    6. The grounds of attack on the decision of the Appeals Tribunal which were advanced before the judge and before us fell into the following categories:-

    1. The hearings before the Disciplinary Tribunal and the Appeals Tribunal constituted the determination of a criminal charge against M Fleurose and what happened there infringed article 6(1),(2) and (3) and article 7

    2. Those hearings constituted the determination of M Fleurose’s civil rights and infringed article 6(1) but he did not receive a fair hearing because

    a. it was not permissible to use in the evidence against him answers which he had allegedly given under compulsion;

    b. during the hearing before the Disciplinary Tribunal M Fleurose, since he had neither Legal Aid nor private means, represented himself whereas the SFA was represented by a number of lawyers; and

    c. the charges which he had to meet were expressed with an unacceptable degree of vagueness.

    DID THE HEARING BEFORE THE DISCIPLINARY TRIBUNAL CONSTITUTE THE DETERMINATION OF A CRIMINAL CHARGE?

  8. The judge answered this question negatively after having carefully considered many cases decided either by the Court or the Commission in Strasbourg including the following :- Engel v The Netherlands (no.1) [1976] 1 EHRR 647, Le Compte, van Leuven & De Meyere v Belgium [1981] 4 EHRR 1, Albert & Le Compte v Belgium [1983] 5 EHRR 533, Bendenoun v France [1994] 18 EHRR 54, Wickramsinghe v United Kingdom [1998] EHRR 338, and Irving Brown v United Kingdom [1998] 28 EHRR CD 233.
  9. Since the decision of the judge there have been two decisions of this court : Han & Yau v Commissioners of Customs and Excise [2001] EWCA Civ 1048 and Official Receiver v Stern [200] 1 WLR 2230.
  10. In the former this court said:

    65. “It seems clear from the case law above cited that in considering the three criteria routinely applied by the Strasbourg Court for the purpose of determining whether the applicant is the subject of a “criminal charge”, the first criterion, namely the categorisation of the allegation in domestic law, is no more than a starting point for the classification, and is not decisive of the nature of the allegation. If the offence the subject of the allegation is not criminalised by the national law, the Court determines whether it is nonetheless criminal in character for the purposes of Article 6 by proceeding to the second and third criteria, namely the nature of the offence and the severity of the penalty which it invokes. As stated in Louko 4/1998/907/1119, the second and third criteria are alternative rather than cumulative. However, that is not an approach which appears to have been adopted in practice and, as also stated in Louko, a cumulative approach may be adopted where the analysis of each criterion does not lead to a clear conclusion; see Bendenoun.

    66. Under the second criterion, the Court considers whether or not, under the law concerned, the 'offence’ is one which applies generally to the public at large or is restricted to a specific group. If the former, then despite its “de-criminalisation” by the national law, it is apt to be regarded as criminal. Further, if a punitive and deterrent penalty is attached, it is likely to be regarded as criminal in character, even in cases where the penalty is in the nature of a fine rather than imprisonment. On the other hand, where the offence is limited to a restricted group, as is generally the case in relation to disciplinary offences, the Court is unlikely to classify a charge under the applicable disciplinary or regulatory code as criminal, at least unless it involves or may lead to loss of liberty.

    67. In the context of disciplinary proceedings, the Strasbourg Court has placed great emphasis on the seriousness of the penalty or imprisonment attached to the offence as the touchstone for holding the proceedings criminal rather than disciplinary: see Engel and see Campbell and Fell v United Kingdom (1984) 7 EHRR 165, a case concerning a serious prison disciplinary offence resulting in an award of 570 days’ loss of remission. The latter case was distinguished by the Divisional Court in the recent decision of Greenfield v The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Case No: CO/248/2001), 22nd February 2001, in a case where the maximum penalty which could be awarded for the prison disciplinary offence in question was 42 additional days, and was wholly different in kind from the penalty which might have been imposed for an equivalent criminal charge. It is plain that the imposition of a substantial fine in disciplinary proceedings will not in itself render charges criminal in nature: see Brown v United Kingdom (1998) 28 EHRR CD 233, in which it was held that the fact that a £10,000 fine was imposed by the Solicitors’ Complaints Tribunal did not attract the provisions of Article 6. However, outside the context of disciplinary proceedings, and in particular, in the field of tax evasion, it appears that a substantial financial penalty which is imposed by way of punishment and deterrence will suffice: see Bendenoun and Georgiou.”

  11. In Official Receiver v Stern [2001] 1 WLR 2230 this Court said at page 2254 and 2258:
  12. “But Sir Richard Scott V.C. was wrong, in our respectful view, if he intended to draw any sharp distinction between proceedings for a penalty brought by the Commission (characterised as criminal proceedings) and regulatory civil proceedings. [Orkem v Commission of the European Communities [1989] E.C.R. 8263 and Otto B.V. v Postbank N.V. [1993] E.C.R. 1-5683] make clear that such proceedings by the Commission would not be criminal proceedings. They provide a considerable measure of support for Mr. Beloff’s hierarchical approach. So does the judgment of the European Court of Human Rights in Albert and Le Compte v Belgium (1983) 5 EHRR 533, a case concerned with disciplinary proceedings against a Belgian doctor who had been reckless in issuing certificates of unfitness to work without proper examination. The judgment of the European Court of Human Rights stated, at pp. 542-543, par. 30:

    “the court does not believe that the two aspects, civil and criminal, of Article 6 (1) are necessarily mutually exclusive. Nonetheless, the Court does not consider it necessary to decide whether, in the specific circumstances, there was a ‘criminal charge’. In point of fact, paragraph 1 of Article 6, violation of which was alleged by the two applicants, applies in civil matters as well as in the criminal sphere. Dr. Albert relied in addition on paragraph 2 and on sub-paragraphs (a), (b) and (d) of paragraph 3, but, in the opinion the court, the principles enshrined therein are, for the present purposes, already contained in the notion of a fair trial as embodied in paragraph 1; the Court will therefore take these principles into account in the context of paragraph 1.”

    So disciplinary proceedings against a professional man or woman, although certainly not classified as criminal, may still bring into play some of the requirements of a fair trial spelt out in Article 6 (2) and (3), including the presumption of innocence: see also p. 546, para. 39.”

    “In our judgment Sir Richard Scott V.C. was plainly right to reject the submission that use in disqualification proceedings of statements obtained under section 235 must necessarily involve a breach of Article 6 (1). The issue of fair trial is one that must be considered in the round, having regard to all relevant factors. The relevant factors include, but are not limited to: (i) that disqualification proceedings are not criminal proceedings, and are primarily for the protection of the public, but do nevertheless often involve serious allegations and almost always carry a degree of stigma for anyone who is disqualified; (ii) that there are degrees of coercion involved in different investigative procedures available in corporate insolvency, and these differences may be reflected in different degrees of prejudice involved in the admission, in disqualification proceedings, of statements obtained by such procedures; and (iii) that in this field as in most other fields, it is generally best for issues of fairness or unfairness to be decided by the trial Judge, either at a pre-trial review or in the course of the trial. Sir Richard Scott V. C referred in detail (in para. 44 of his judgment, ante, pp.2243-2244; summarised above, ante, p. 2248E-F to the decisions as to evidence which the trial judge might have to make. He was right not to attempt to anticipate those decisions.”

  13. Anthony Speaight Q.C. and John Passmore, appearing pro bono for M Fleurose, made a number of points in their carefully constructed argument for which the court is grateful.
  14. There are no English decisions in point, but there was a decision of the Cour de Cassation, namely Commission des Operations de Bourse v M Jean-Marc Oury (5.2.1999) in which the Court quashed a penalty of FF 500,000 imposed on M Oury. Mr Speaight submitted that one of the matters upon which the Court there relied was a breach of article 6(2) of the Convention and that therefore the Court must have been of the view that the proceedings involved the determination of a criminal offence. The submission was however hampered by the fact that the French and English material placed before this court were in an incomplete and unsatisfactory state and that the decision of the Cour de Cassation appears to have had a number of grounds and that whatever view they took of the Convention was not crucial to their decision. Since reserving judgment I have taken the opportunity of looking at the “conclusions” of Advocate General Lafortune, a note of the M. Metivet, the rapporteur and the Court’s formal decision in No 436 on the 5th February 1999. Even with the help of these it is not clear to what extent the COB’s powers are the same as those of the DAT or whether the penal nature of the COB’s powers was in issue before the Cour de Cassation or was the basis of its decisions. In those circumstances we have not thought it right to let that decision influence us in this judgment.
  15. Mr. Speaight submitted that there was no exact parallel between the members of the financial services industry and members of the medical profession or of legal bodies such as the Law Society or the Bar. He submitted that the former required no examination qualifications whereas the latter did. He submitted that in a free society there was a basic right to trade in the market place provided one was prepared to be regulated, whereas there was no such basic right to be a doctor or a lawyer. He submitted, without any supporting evidence, that there were substantially more people in the financial sector than in the legal or medical sectors. He submitted that, although in theory an individual who wished to trade in the financial sector was acting voluntarily in deciding to submit himself to the SFA’s code, in practice he had no option if he wished to trade. He relied on these factors in combination to support his submission that the regulatory code was in practice closer to the criminal code of general application than the codes under consideration in the case law. He relied on the possibility of an unlimited fine which could be imposed for a breach of the Statement of Principles.
  16. We accept of course that to be debarred from gaining one’s livelihood in an activity in which one has done so for much of one’s life is a serious matter. However, applying the principles recently set out in Han & Yau quoted above we are not persuaded by any of these submissions that the proceedings instituted by the SFA against M Fleurose are properly to be regarded as involving a criminal charge or offence.
  17. WAS THE RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL INFRINGED?

  18. It is common ground between the parties, and we are content to accept, that the Disciplinary Tribunal was involved in the determination of M Fleurose’s civil rights for the purposes of Article 6. Therefore clearly the proceedings had to be fair. We accept for present purposes, as did the judge, that it was for the SFA to prove their case, that the SFA had to inform M Fleurose in good time of the nature of the charges, that he must have adequate time and facilities to prepare his defence, a proper opportunity to give and call evidence and question those witnesses called against him. What fairness requires will vary from case to case and manifestly the gravity and complexity of the charges and of the defence will impact on what fairness requires. In this context we have born in mind, as did the judge, the points made by the Human Rights Court in Paragraphs 30 and 39 of Albert & Le Compte v Belgium, and in paragraphs 32 and 33 of Dombo Beheer BV v The Netherlands [1993] 18 EHRR 213.
  19. Turning to the substance of the allegation of unfairness, we think it convenient to approach the matter by looking first at the allegation of vagueness in the charges, then at the question of equality of arms and finally to consider the factor on which Mr Speaight placed most emphasis, namely, the admission of the material allegedly obtained under compulsion.
  20. So far as vagueness is concerned, Mr Speaight did not and could not seek to suggest that M Fleurose did not know of what he was accused. Having received the document referred to in paragraph 8 of the judgment as the Summary of Facts, he both knew what were the specific acts alleged and what was the state of mind alleged. M Fleurose throughout the disciplinary hearing accepted that those acts coupled with that state of mind amounted to the disciplinary offence alleged. His defence was that he did not have the relevant state of mind. Like the Judge we consider that the admitted lack of specificity in the general principles, quoted in paragraph 18 of the judgment below, did not, in those circumstances, help M Fleurose to make out a case that the hearing had been unfair.
  21. Mr Speaight submitted that the lack of specificity in the general principles conflicted with a general principle that criminal offences should be clearly spelled out in the criminal code so that an individual may fairly foresee the consequences of his actions. We have already indicated that we are not dealing with criminal charges. On the facts of the present case, given that M Fleurose knew at all relevant times that what was alleged amounted to a disciplinary offence, we do not consider that this submission avails him.
  22. Turning to the question of equality of arms, M Fleurose has in fact had the benefit of first class legal representation before the Disciplinary Tribunal, before the Judge and before us. The gap relates to the Appeal Tribunal. This was presided over by a former Law Lord against whose conduct of the hearing not the slightest complaint is made. Indeed it is apparent that he was at pains to take points on M Fleurose’s behalf. In due course the Appeal Tribunal dismissed the appeal by the SFA.
  23. We were concerned at the oral hearing to discover what matter it was that might have been advanced on M Fleurose’s behalf before the Disciplinary Tribunal which in fact was not advanced by reason of his lack of legal training - the more so since no such matter had been advanced in the written argument. Mr Speaight’s only suggestion was as follows.
  24. He submitted that it would have been open to an advocate appearing on M Fleurose’s behalf at the Appeal Tribunal to submit that M Fleurose should not be held to have failed to observe high standards of integrity or of market conduct because he was relatively junior and did not have much time to consider how he should react to the improper orders of his superior.
  25. In the abstract, we agree that this line of defence could have been advanced at the first hearing. Leading Counsel representing him at first instance did not advance the point : to do so would have been at odds with the whole nature of M Fleurose’s case there, namely, that the sales initiated by him were done to unwind a hedge. M Fleurose accepted that he knew that manipulating the market in the manner alleged was improper. No suggestion is made that Leading Counsel’s conduct at first instance is open to the slightest criticism. Nor can we see room for any.
  26. In those circumstances, it would have been extremely difficult on the appeal - where in principle new evidence is not allowed - for the notional lawyer to have sought to persuade the Tribunal that M Fleurose did not have time to consider whether or not his action was improper. The point is in any event not one of such subtlety that it needs a trained legal mind to advance it. M Fleurose could have done so but, we presume, decided not to. We cannot see any unfairness resulting from the absence of legal representation. The Appeal Tribunal gave the fact that this was a man obeying orders appropriate weight in deciding to dismiss the SFA’s appeal against a sentence which the SFA regarded as unduly lenient.
  27. In those circumstances, we do not need to consider whether, in this class of case, the Convention ever requires that free legal representation be provided.
  28. We turn now to what Mr Speaight submitted as his first ground, namely, that answers given by M Fleurose under questioning by the LSE and before the Disciplinary Tribunal were improperly admitted and this therefore resulted in unfairness. The complaint concentrated on the answers given in the LSE inquiry. A number of points can be made.
  29. 1. These were not criminal proceedings. In the circumstances, neither under our old domestic law nor under any Convention law, is there any question of the evidence being inadmissible in the absence of objections. In civil proceedings the question of admissibility is one of discretion in the Tribunal of first instance.

    2. The Disciplinary Tribunal was not asked by Leading Counsel on behalf of M Fleurose to exclude the relevant evidence with which M Fleurose had been served in advance. Nor was there an objection to the questioning before the Disciplinary Tribunal.

    3. Mr Speaight rightly accepts that the Leading Counsel presiding over the Disciplinary Tribunal could not be expected of his own motion to exclude the evidence. Indeed it seems to us that for him to have done so would probably have given rise to a complaint of unfairness.

    4. In his notice of appeal to the Appeal Tribunal M Fleurose argues that not enough of the interview had been admitted by the Disciplinary Tribunal. This bears out our comment in relation to the third point.

    5. M Fleurose, appearing for himself and not averse to making allegations of unfairness, did not make the allegation that it was unfair to admit the contents of the interview.

    6. M Fleurose, although under undoubted practical pressures, was under no legal compulsion to answer the questions in the LSE interview which was being conducted not by his regulator but by his firm’s regulator. Nor was he under any compulsion to answer the question in cross-examination before the Disciplinary Tribunal.

    7. The allegedly compelled evidence was but a part of the total evidence against M Fleurose. It is not inconceivable that the Disciplinary Tribunal would have come to the same conclusion even had it never seen that evidence.

  30. So this court is thus being asked to exclude evidence which the Disciplinary Tribunal rightly, in the absence of any objection, allowed to be included. We see no basis for any such request. Nor indeed is it clear what would follow if we were to accede to it. Quashing the decision of the Appeal Tribunal is not enough because it would leave the decision of the Disciplinary Tribunal standing. Yet we see no ground for complaint of the way that Tribunal conducted the hearing.
  31. In the last analysis, looking at the matter in the round in the manner which was adopted in Stern, we see no ground whatever for suggesting that the hearing was in any way unfair.
  32. This appeal is dismissed.
  33. Order: Appeal dismissed; costs £25,000 to be paid by the claimant; application for permission to appeal to the House of Lords refused.

    (Order does not form part of the approved judgment)


© 2001 Crown Copyright


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