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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Choudhury & Ors v Ahmed [2005] EWCA Civ 1102 (27 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1102.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1102 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM WANDSWORTH COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE MEDAWAR QC)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE NEUBERGER
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(1) MASRU ZZAMAN CHOUDHURY | ||
(2)MONZU ZZAMAN CHOUDHURY | ||
(3)NASRU ZZAMAN CHOUDHURY | Claimants/Claimants | |
-v- | ||
FAHIM AHMED | Defendant/Defendant |
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MR S JONES (instructed by DKLL) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"These people have, for the most part, conducted themselves in the same way as many from Bangladesh do in a less formal way than might be expected as being usual amongst business people in this country because of the degree of trust that they have in each other as fellow Muslims but more significantly fellow countrymen and even more significantly coming from Sellitt, and therefore they conduct their affairs on this occasion, as on many others, in a way that starts off, as I say, with trust and a lack of formality. In this case there has been almost no formality. There are few, if any, relevant documents about the setting up of the arrangement that led to the defendant Fahim Ahmed running a restaurant at 7 Pound Lane, Epsom and in the running of that restaurant he was paying rent to the brothers. There were varying stages, varying partnerships between the brothers and others including this defendant."
It is right to say that although there was undoubtedly a lack of formality, there are a number of statements, including bank documents, from which certain inferences can be drawn.
"Essentially, I have to weigh up who is telling the truth here and I regret to say that I am wholly unable to accept Monzu Choudhury's evidence. Internally in the way he gave his evidence it was neither satisfactory nor complete. I did not believe him. I believe the defendant and accept his evidence. Where the evidence differed between them I preferred the evidence of the defendant. I have no doubt that, he being younger, coming from the same area as the three brothers, I believe him when he says he looked upon the other brothers as his brothers, not literally, but his brothers, that he trusted them, that he was in a more junior business capacity to them. At the beginning of all this he was probably only in his early twenties, he says, when he came here. They had been here longer, certainly the second claimant had been educated here from the age of thirteen and they were probably much more familiar with the business scene in this country than Fahim Ahmed was coming from Bangladesh at a later time."
"(5) The principal ground of appeal that is raised is that the learned judge should have acceded to the application to permit the first claimant to give evidence dealing with the alleged direct payments. In my view, the complaint that the judge was unfair in the way that he dealt with the application has a real prospect of success. It seems to me arguable at least that it was highly unsatisfactory that the claimants should in effect be taken by ambush. The allegation that the defendant had made substantial payments to the first claimant in satisfaction of substantial arrears of rent in order to enable him to meet his gambling debts is something which should undoubtedly have been pleaded by the defendant and, even if not pleaded, it should undoubtedly have been mentioned in his witness statement. It appears in neither document. Since the evidence that was given by the defendant on this topic went to the heart of part of his defence, it seems to me, at any rate arguably, that the judge should have given the claimants the opportunity to adduce the evidence in order to deal with that issue.
(6) I find it difficult to understand why the judge rejected the application. It would not have involved an adjournment of the hearing. The first claimant was present. Counsel only wished to ask four questions. I accordingly propose to grant permission to appeal."
"MR GLOVER: Your Honour, the evidence is closed on behalf of my learned friend and, your Honour, I have an unusual but an application that can nonetheless be made, and it's an application to take evidence out of order. It is an application for you to hear evidence from Mr Masru on the limited points as to whether or not -- literally four questions -- whether or not he did ever receive cheques from the brother as alleged by him now. Now, of course, your Honour, my learned friend has indicated whilst he accepts the principle, he is, of course, going to oppose the application.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: All this should have been done a long time ago.
MR GLOVER: Your --
JUDGE MEDAWAR: You had ample opportunity after the short adjournment to have sought leave to call a witness whose --
MR GLOVER: Your Honour.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: -- whose -- from whom you could have extracted a statement had you wished to do so.
MR GLOVER: Your Honour.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: You didn't choose to do so, you've considered the case -- continued the case without it and I'm not proposing to admit (Inaudible) [sic] at this juncture.
MR GLOVER: Your Honour, if I could, maybe, complete my submissions on the application, your Honour, in case it is relevant for a later date.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: Well, unless you've got some other matter to raise the answer is I've already ruled upon it and you can't.
MR GLOVER: Well, your Honour, I'll simply say this then, your Honour, keeping it as short as I can with an eye on the clock. Those instructing me have been devilling as hard as they can to get clear answers from the defendant as to what he says about cheques, who he says they were paid to and indeed to produce a cheque so that we can trace the payees and give some clear evidence on those points. It's only today that we've received a limited number of those cheques with the payees on them, none of whom seem to be directly to Masru notwithstanding what's said in the accountant's report. Having now heard the evidence of Mr Ahmed, which in my respectful submission should have properly been contained within his witness statement being core and central to the issues before the court, having only now --
JUDGE MEDAWAR: Mr Glover, you're not saying anything else, you're merely repeating yourself in --
MR GLOVER: Your Honour.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: -- different ways.
MR GLOVER: I'd simply say that now having heard him live the allegations that have been raised for the first time against Mr Masru he should have a right of reply to those issues alone.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: Much of those matters are -- if not most of them arose out of your cross-examination. The way you chose to cross-examine him, that was the result of what he had to say. I'm not admitting any other evidence now."
The judge said that it had gone on far too long already.
"I do not know if the defendant is seeking to show that these cheques, for example, represented payments to us in respect of rent. This is denied. At the time, my brothers and I were running another Haweli outlet in Sutton. For some time, we had been unable to process credit card payments and we used to take a bundle of these periodically to the defendant at Haweli of Epsom, asking him to process them through his account. He then made payments out to us from his account, although I cannot remember for certain whether this was in cash or by cheque."
It is clear from that statement, which was expressly made on behalf of himself and his two brothers, the co-claimants, that he was aware that the defendant was likely to say that those cheques amounted to part payment of the rent. On the morning of the trial, the defendant produced the originals of six cheques. Those cheques were put in evidence and have been produced to us.
"I mean, to some extent you [that is Monzu] and I are at a disadvantage here, Mr Choudhury, because as you can see from page 84 it's Masru's name that features in relation to all of these debts where --
JUDGE MEDAWAR: Well, where is he, there is no statement filed, is there?
MR JONES: And he's not given - he hasn't made a witness statement.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: Well, why is there no statement?
MR JONES: He's not a witness that I'm able to cross-examine but, sir, we're doing the best we can.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: Well, why is there no statement from your brother? Is he still alive?
A: Yes.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: Where is he?
A: He's here.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: He's here in this room now?
A: Yes.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: Well, there we are. Yes."
"Your Honour, that being the case there's no further witnesses for the claimant.
JUDGE MEDAWAR: There seriously is no other witness?
MR GLOVER: Your Honour, no."
Order: Appeal Dismissed. Costs in favour of the Defendant