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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Taylor v Nugent Care Society [2004] EWCA Civ 51 (19 January 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/51.html Cite as: [2004] WLR 1129, [2004] 3 All ER 671, [2004] EWCA Civ 51, [2004] 1 WLR 1129 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
(MR JUSTICE MOSES)
The Strand London |
||
B e f o r e :
(The Lord Woolf of Barnes)
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
and
LORD JUSTICE WALL
____________________
MARK TAYLOR | ||
(Formerly MARK HOUSLEY) | Appellant/Claimant | |
and | ||
NUGENT CARE SOCIETY | ||
(Formerly CATHOLIC SOCIAL SERVICES, LIVERPOOL) | Respondent/Defendant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
(instructed by Messrs Jackson & Canter, Liverpool L1 8BW)
appeared on behalf of THE APPELLANT/CLAIMANT
MR EDWARD FAULKS QC and MR NICHOLAS FEWTRELL
(instructed by Messrs Hill Dickinson, Liverpool L2 9XL)
appeared on behalf of THE RESPONDENT/DEFENDANT
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Monday 19 January 2004
THE LORD CHIEF JUSTICE:
"15. It is an abuse for this claimant to seek to bring individual proceedings at the time he does, having failed in his application to join the group action? Secondly, even if it is an abuse, is it a proportionate response of this Court to prevent him bringing any action at all, because that would be the result of an order to strike out in pursuing his claim and seeking to vindicate his rights as a result of the treatment he suffered in the care home.
16. The starting point must be that there is no obligation upon a Claimant to join a group action. There is nothing within the rules that requires a claimant to do so. However, the overriding objective is the CPR, and the rules in relation to group actions themselves, do have the consequence that an individual may be prevented from joining a group at a later date than that which is specified in the group directions, or in issuing separate proceedings, if such may be the result, unfairness or injustice may ensure, not only to the litigants in the group action, but in relation to litigants generally, having regard to the overriding objective, and if the effect of preventing him from pursuing his claim would not be disproportionate (see the comment at paragraph 19.13.1, page 406 of the White Book 2003). The starting point must be the decision of District Judge Fairclough in refusing this claimant permission to join the group action out of time. He had regard to the effect on resources and time that would be engaged should the claimant be allowed to join the group action so long after the time he ought to have sought to join it in the absence of any cogent explanation for the delay. He took the view that if he joined, the claimant's joined, the claimant's joinder would be bound to have an effect upon the group action.
17. In my judgment, that effect can hardly be significantly less, were he to bring proceedings outside the group action...."
He went on to set out the disadvantages of not adhering to the requirements of a GLO. He indicated that he accepted the evidence of Mr Spencer, filed on behalf of the defence, indicating that there will be adverse effects upon the defendants' limited resources in meeting the claims as a result of those resources having to be diverted to deal with an individual parallel claim brought by the present claimant. He then added:
"21. There is, in my judgment however, a more general point. It is true that there is no obligation, as I have said, upon a claimant to join a group action. But if he does not do so, but is aware of it, then he does run the risk of being deprived of the opportunity to bring independent action should it be unjust and unfair if he would be permitted to do so. This claimant, specifically, is seeking to join the group action, accepted that there would be prejudice to that group action, and I refer to the quotation I have already cited at paragraph 12 which was part of the argument in support of his joining the group action. After all, he thought it was to his own benefit that he should join the group action, to the benefit of defendants, and to the benefit of the Court. That is no less true now than it was then.
22. The whole purpose of group actions is designed to enable resources to be directed where they can best be directed both for the advantage of the parties and of the courts. Were a claimant who had sought, but been disappointed, in his application to join a group action, permitted to bring separate action without any good reason other than a way of overcoming his previous failure to join a group action, but to the system of group actions, seems to me to be plain.
23. One has also only to contrast the position of this claimant with the position of other claimants, no doubt suffering under similar tragic circumstances to that which the claimant appears to have suffered, to see that that is a relevant issue and a significant issue in considering the fairness and justice of the case. Those who joined the group action but failed to comply with orders, have been deprived of the opportunity of pursuing their claims; their claims have been struck out. Some were allowed extensions; others were not and indeed the judge commented upon that and the need to maintain the discipline of the pursuit of the group action when he, Poole J, considered an appeal from the District Judge.
24. The result of not striking out this claim would be to give an advantage to this claimant over and above those whose cases at least had the merit of joining the group action at the appropriate time. If it was right to strike out some of their cases because they had failed to comply with time limits, it seems difficult to see why they should not be allowed now to be in exactly the same position as this claimant and bring individual actions."
".... if I were to refuse this application, any further directions in relation to the proper conduct of the matter would be bound to be subject, in fairness to the defendant and other litigants involved, to the same restraints and restrictions and time limits as those involved in the group action. Yet District Judge Fairclough, in his unappealed judgment, has already pointed out that would not be possible."
ORDER: (Not part of judgment)
Appeal allowed; appellant to have half of the costs of the appeal, to be subject to a detailed assessment if not agreed (to be dealt with at the end of the litigation); the order for costs in relation to the hearing below to be set aside.