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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 >> Scribes West Ltd v Relsa Anstalt & Anor (No 2) [2004] EWCA Civ 965 (20 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/965.html Cite as: [2004] 4 All ER 653, [2004] EWCA Civ 965, [2005] 1 WLR 1839 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
Judge Mayer
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE MANCE
and
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
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SCRIBES WEST LIMITED |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and |
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RELSA ANSTALT and Anor (No 2) |
First Defendant/Respondent |
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Andrew Bruce (instructed by Richards Butler) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 29th June 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Brooke :
"The First Defendant has been able to serve additional evidence. That evidence is also attached to this skeleton. Subject to that evidence being admitted, the First Defendant and [RB] will not object to the above question being finally determined as between all relevant parties."
" I am asked to decide essentially whether a lease could be forfeited by a landlord who does not hold the reversionary interest, the latter not having been registered in the Land Registry at the relevant time. Subject to my decision on this point there are procedural issues I have to deal with."
"51. I therefore, find: (1) RB were entitled to the rent from LSC pursuant to the TR1 and (2) RB were entitled to re-enter and forfeit the lease on 16th July 2001 and, having done so, the lease is no longer extant. The only remedy available to the claimants is an application for relief from forfeit pursuant to section 146 of the Law of Property Act 1925. This application is still outstanding.
52. I now turn to deal with the individual applications before me: (1) I refuse the claimants' application for permission to amend the particulars of claim; similarly, I refuse joining any further defendants to this claim; (2) I strike out the claim against the first defendant, RA, and I substitute RB for RA as first defendant. As I have already said, the only outstanding application, therefore, remaining is the claimants' application for relief from forfeit. That hearing I adjourn to another time and transfer it back to the Central London County Court.
53. I adjourn the hearing for hearing submissions about the final order and about costs; written submissions from both parties on the above by 9 September 2003."
"1 (2) In this Order
(a) 'decision' includes any judgment, order or direction of the High Court at a county court;
(c) 'final decision' means a decision of a court that would formally determine (subject to possible appeal or detailed assessment of costs) the entire proceedings whichever way the court decided the issues before it.
(3) A decision of a court shall be treated as a final decision where it -
(a) is made at the conclusion of part of a hearing or trial which has been split into parts; and
(b) would, if made at the conclusion of that hearing or trial, be a final decision under paragraph (2)(c)."
Article 4 provides, so far as is material:
"4. An appeal shall lie to the Court of Appeal where the decision to be appealed is a final decision -
(a) in a claim made under Part 7 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 and allocated to the multi-track under those Rules, or
(b) made in proceedings under the Companies Act 1985 or the Companies Act 1989 or to which Sections I, II or III of Part 57 or any of Parts 58 to 63 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 apply."
"(3) A judgment or order shall be treated as final if the entire cause or matter would (subject only to any possible appeal) have been finally determined whichever way the court below had decided the issues before it.
(4) For the purposes of paragraph (3), where the final hearing or the trial of a cause or matter is divided into parts, a judgment or order made at the end of any part shall be treated as if made at the end of the complete hearing or trial."
"16. The normal route of appeal will not be followed where a circuit judge in the county court gives the final decision in a multi-track claim allocated by a court to the multi-track...
17. For this purpose a final decision is one that would finally determine the entire proceedings, subject to any possible appeal or detailed assessment of costs, whichever way the court decided the issues before it (DO, Article 1(2)(c)). A final decision includes the assessment of damages or any other final decision where it is 'made at the conclusion of part of a hearing or trial which has been split up into parts and would, if made at the conclusion of that hearing or trial, be a final decision' (DO, Article 1(3)); it does not include a decision only on costs. This means that if a judge makes a final decision on any aspect of a claim, such as limitation, or on part of a claim which has been directed to be heard separately, this is a final decision within the meaning of this provision.
18. Orders striking out the proceedings or a statement of case, and orders giving summary judgment under CPR Part 24 are not final decisions because they are not decisions that would finally determine the entire proceedings whichever way the court decided the issues before it."
"24 Practitioners who rely only on the White Book for their procedural law will not have obtained the full flavour of what I said in my judgment in Tanfern. An abbreviated summary of this passage is given in the third main paragraph on page 1256 of Part 1 of the 2003 Edition. This is why I am returning to this topic now. There is a rather fuller treatment of the topic in Volume 1 of the Civil Court Practice 2002 (the Green Book) at pp 907-8.
25. For the purposes of article 1(2)(c) and article 1(3) the relevant proceedings are the proceedings which relate to the issue whether notice of objection was served by the claimants within three months of completion of the installation of the apparatus. In the event Judge Morgan decided that issue in favour of the claimants, and he determined it finally in the sense that the defendants could not have reopened it when the eventual trial on the merits took place. If he had decided it in favour of the defendants, that would be the end of the action. In either case the dissatisfied party's only method of redress was by way of appeal."
"This question of 'final' or 'interlocutory' is so uncertain that the only thing for practitioners to do is to look up the practice books and see what has been decided on the point."
"[A]s is well known, this clarity conceals the obscurity of what is or is not an interlocutory order".
"Order 33, r. 3 gives the Court a wide discretion to order the separate trial of different issues in appropriate cases and a decision is not to be regarded as interlocutory simply because it will not be finally determinative of the action whichever way it goes. Instead, a broad commonsense test should be applied, asking whether (if not tried separately) the issue would have formed a substantive part of the final trial. Judged by that test this judgment was plainly final, even though it did not give the plaintiff a money judgment and would not, even if in the airline's favour, have ended the action." (Emphasis added)
"An appeal shall lie to the Court of Appeal where the decision to be appealed is a final decision
(a) in a claim allocated by a court to the multi-track under rules 12.7, 14.8 or 26.5 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998; or
(b) made in proceedings to which rule 49(2) of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 refers or to which any of Parts 57 to 62 of those Rules applies."
"The claim form
3.1 A claimant must use practice form N1 or practice form N208 (the Part 8 claim form) to start a claim (but see paragraphs 3.2 and 3.4 below).
3.2 Rule 7.9 deals with fixed date claims and rule 7.10 deals with the Production Centre for the issue of claims
3.3 If a claimant wishes his claim to proceed under Part 8, or if the claimant is required to proceed under Part 8, the claim form should so state. Otherwise the claim will proceed under Part 7
3.4 Other practice directions may require special practice forms to be used to commence particular types of proceedings "
Lord Justice Mance:
Lord Justice Dyson: