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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hassan v Holburn & Ors [2004] EWCA Civ 789 (09 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/789.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 789 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
(MR JUSTICE POOLE)
The Strand London |
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B e f o r e :
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DR RASHID QAZI HASSAN | ||
Applicant/Appellant | ||
and | ||
(1) COLIN HOLBURN | ||
(2) JOHNA RIZKALLA | ||
(3) SANDWELL & WEST BIRMINGHAM HOSPITALS NHS TRUST | ||
Respondents |
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Smith Bernal, 190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HD
Telephone 020 7421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Crown Copyright ©
Wednesday 9 June 2004
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY:
"I will be appealing this costs order in respect of today's application."
The judge said:
"Very well. I am rising."
That appears to me to correspond with the order, which indicates that permission to appeal was neither granted nor refused, because technically it was not applied for. But I will not let Dr Hassan's case slip into that gap. In fairness to him I will treat what occurred as a refusal of permission to appeal and therefore treat the present application as a renewal of the application.
"16. The defendants' case on the fax header is that it was stored in the memory of the fax machine on which it was sent to their solicitors on 22nd August 2002 when it was acquired second-hand by them from a dealer, who in turn must have acquired it from the original owners, Dave and Elaine Miller. The presence of their name is, accordingly, an historical accident.
17. The claimant does not accept that explanation. As is apparent from the paragraphs of the particulars of claim which I have recited, he asserts that it affords evidence of publication to the named people and to members of their family. In his skeleton argument, in paragraph 2.7, he rejects the defendants' contention as to the probable cause of the appearance of that name at the top of a fax message and asserts that it is 'much more straightforward to conclude that Dave and Elaine Miller .... are two legally clever, retired professions and have been, along with some others, handling correspondence and documentation in respect of the first defendant."
"The policy of the section is that if factual issues are in any event going to be litigated between the parties, the parties should be able to rely upon any cause of action which substantially arises from those facts. There is no indication in the drafting of the Act that there should be a further limitation on section 35."
The policy, therefore, is not to stifle purely on limitation grounds a claim arising out of facts which are anyway going to be relied upon to found a different claim. But I have no doubt that the judge was also right to hold that the effect of section 35 is not automatic. It requires an exercise of judgment by the court -- something also acknowledged in Lloyds Bank v Rogers and made concrete in the Civil Procedure Rules 14.4(2), which state that the court "may" allow an amendment.
"61. I do not, however, wish to pass from the discretionary exercise under section 32A without commenting on a factor which is not specifically listed in the statutory checklist but which is nonetheless encompassed within the words 'equitable' and 'all the circumstances of the case'.
62. As I have already recited, this claimant has in this action invited me to draw, and would invite any subsequent court to draw, inferences from the primary facts that are extremely farfetched. I cite as one example the claimant's assertion that Dave and Elaine Miller were two legally clever, retired professionals handling correspondence and documentation in respect of the first defendant. His proposition has only to be stated for it to be realised that it is extremely farfetched.
63. But the matter does not stop there. Because of the conduct of proceedings in this action, the claimant has embarked upon another action issued in the Central Office against not only the three defendants in this action but also the solicitor for defendants, counsel Mr Mitchell for defendants and four named officials of this court. He alleges that the history of the conduct of this action demonstrates, amongst other things, an injurious conspiracy against him by all ten named defendants. To give a flavour of the pleading that he has drafted in that action, I quote only from paragraph 27:
'The judge, District Judge Owen, was so much affected by these incitements by the fourth, sixth, seventh and eighth defendants....'
-- that is a reference to the defendants' solicitor, to their counsel and to two court officials --
'.... that he managed to insert these unfounded and unfair grievances of the defendants into his judgment and order dated 30th October 2003. Ever since the conduct of the fourth, sixth, seventh and eighth defendants has turned spoilt and commanding, with the fourth defendant in particular having princely style, a style that is no doubt a product of collaboration and collusion between various defendants.'
64. The bringing of that action and the extravagant terms in which it is pleaded satisfy me that, in the context of this or any other litigation, this claimant will not conduct his claim in a reasonable manner but, on the contrary, will do so in a vexatious and abusive manner.
65. It seems to me therefore that, in any event, it would not be equitable to permit such a defamation claim to proceed against these defendants."
"I add for the sake of completeness that, even without that finding, I would be satisfied that it was not equitable to allow the claim to proceed for the more conventional reasons which I have given. I would principally rely upon the clear evidence that the claimant knew by 2000 at the latest the gist of the complaint that he wished to make, and that the evidence available to the defendants would be substantially less cogent if the matter were to be litigated now rather than within a short period of the cause or causes of action having arisen."