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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 >> Goodwood Recoveries Ltd v Breen [2005] EWCA Civ 414 (19 April 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/414.html Cite as: [2006] 2 All ER 533, [2007] 2 Costs LR 147, [2005] EWCA Civ 414, [2006] WLR 2723, [2006] 1 WLR 2723 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL LONDON CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
MR RECORDER WOODS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE RIX
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Goodwood Recoveries Ltd |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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William Peter Breen And between: Willam Peter Breen -and- Michael Robert Slater |
Defendant Applicant/ Respondent Defendant/ Appellant |
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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)
Mr Nicholas Bacon (instructed by Messrs Butcher Burns) for the Appellant
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix:
Introduction
The background to the claim against Mr Breen
"Please note that it has been agreed that the Petition will be withdrawn and accordingly please refer this matter to a District Judge so that the Petition can be dismissed forthwith with no order as to costs."
"We acted for the Company between September 1998 and February 1999 in one matter only, namely proceedings against a debtor, W P Breen Limited and a director of this company, Mr W P Breen.
The debt was some £34,000 odd. Following legal action the sum of £20,000 was paid by the debtor directly to the company. Mr Breen personally guaranteed the outstanding balance plus costs. The balance due, £16,700 was not paid and we then issued bankruptcy proceedings against Mr Breen. Apparently terms were negotiated for the petition to be withdrawn but we had no involvement in these discussions and we do not know what terms were agreed.
For your information we are a creditor of the company in respect of unpaid fees of about £1,000…"
Mr Slater's interest in the claim
"24. Mr Slater's connection with the original action was of course very close indeed. An observer might have been forgiven for thinking that it was his case and no-one else's. He played all the parts of director, shareholder, company secretary, solicitor and investigator and was the only witness for the Claimant. He was also responsible for the decision to purchase the alleged debt in the first place and of making it the subject matter of the claim, although I don't doubt that he also discussed matters with his wife.
25. Not surprisingly in the circumstances, it was not contended on his behalf that I should not have regard to my findings in the original action, or that his connection with the original proceedings was not so close as to make it permissible for me to do so without any injustice to him."
The merits of the litigation against Mr Breen
"47. When Mr Slater resumed his evidence on 19.11.03 he still maintained that his recollection was that he had written the letters in question on the instructions of the Official Receiver, as he may have felt bound to do having previously said so on oath in respect of the letter dated 24.2.99.
48. Not only do I find his recollection is wrong, but I regret that having heard his evidence when he first gave it and subsequently I do not accept that at any material time he has had any genuine recollection of receiving instructions from the Official Receiver's office not to proceed with the bankruptcy petition.
49. Nor having seen the meticulous interest in the detail of this case shown by him throughout the trial or his grasp of the detail evident from his various letters and statements in the course of this dispute, am I able to accept that his failure to disclose the letter of 8.3.99, or his declaration by letter dated 7.8.03 that all documents relevant to the issues in this case had been disclosed, were simply oversights or mistakes on his part."
"58. One thing however was to my mind clear from their evidence and that was that they were both genuinely convinced that the matter had been settled between them in 1999 and that the claim now being made against Mr Breen was quite unjustified."
Mr Slater's conduct of the litigation
"101. Mr McHale, who no longer has any business connection with Mr Breen giving him a financial incentive to do so, was fortunately for Mr Breen and the interests of justice not deterred from giving evidence and has come over from Ireland to do so on both occasions – for the original hearing on 4.9.03 and also for the resumed hearing on 19.11.03 – but had he been deterred by Mr Slater's letter to him dated 7.8.03 this also would have given rise to a real risk of Mr Breen being denied justice."
"100. These complaints have of course to be considered in the context of the claim ever since [the claimant] at the instance of Mr Slater took an assignment of the alleged debt the subject matter of this claim, and Mr Slater's repeated attempts to get Mr Breen to cave in and to accept his assertions in one form or another that any defence of the claim was hopeless, in circumstances where there was a real risk of Mr Breen being denied justice as a result of being denied access by Mr Slater to the letter dated 8.3.99, which demonstrated the contrary."
The security for costs application
The judgment below
"36. The cases Mr Bacon relies on are all very different from this one, and not cases such as this of intermeddling in other people's affairs by taking an assignment of a perceived debt owed to someone else and then pursuing it with a view to gain and using a worthless husband and wife company operated from their home address as the vehicle for doing so, when if Mr Slater and his wife had taken an assignment of the debt themselves, which they could just as well have done, there would have been no question but that he would have been liable for costs."
"49. I do not by any means accept all the submissions made by Mr Graham, or to be found in his Skeleton Argument, but I am satisfied for the reasons I have given that more than sufficient of the grounds he relies on are made out and there is quite sufficient causal connection between them and the costs in question to bring this case on its particular facts within the accepted principles and the ambit of section 51(3). The case is out of the ordinary and exceptional. Thus I do have jurisdiction to order Mr Slater to pay the Defendant's costs, if I think it just to so.
50. On the essential question of whether it is just to do so in the particular circumstances of this case, I am also of the view that it is and that justice would not be done, if I did not do so. I will therefore exercise my discretion in the matter accordingly."
The submissions
The authorities: directors
"The controlling director of a one-man company is inevitably the person who causes the costs to be incurred, in one sense, by causing the company to defend the proceedings. But it could not be right that in every such case he should be made personally liable for the costs, even if he knows that the company will not be able to meet the plaintiff's costs, should the company prove unsuccessful. That would be far too great an inroad on the principle of limited liability. I do not say that there may not be cases where a director may not properly be liable for costs. Thus he might be made liable if the company's defence is not bona fide, as, for example, where the company has been advised that there is no defence, and the proceedings are defended out of spite, or for the sole purpose of causing the plaintiffs to incur irrecoverable costs. No doubt there will be other cases. But such cases must necessarily be rare. In the great majority of cases the directors of an insolvent company which defends proceedings brought against it should not be at personal risk of costs."
"Such an order is, however, exceptional, since it is rarely appropriate. It may be made in a wide variety of circumstances where the third party is considered to be the real party interested in the outcome of the suit…It is not, however, sufficient to render a director liable for costs that he was a director of the company and caused it to bring or defend proceedings which he funded and which ultimately failed. Where such proceedings are brought bona fide and for the benefit of the company, the company is the real plaintiff. If in such a case an order for costs could be made against a director in the absence of some impropriety or bad faith on his part, the doctrine of the separate liability of the company would be eroded and the principle that such orders should be exceptional would be nullified. The position of a liquidator is a fortiori…"
"34. A crucial question is whether the relevant directors (or director) hold a bona fide belief that (i) the company has an arguable defence, and (ii) it is in the interests of the company for it to advance that defence. If they do then (in the absence of special circumstances) to make them pay costs of proceedings in which they are not a party would constitute an unlawful inroad into the principle of limited liability…
35. I cannot accept Mr Elleray's submissions that the defence to the petitions was conducted in a belief that it was in the interest of the companies. Despite the judge accepting that Mr Backhouse had been advised that there was a reasonable chance of defending the petitions, the judge held that Mr Backhouse did not give any serious consideration as to what was in the interests of the companies and their creditors. The costs were expended for Mr Backhouse's personal interests…"
"Prior to presentation of the petitions, Mr Backhouse had only his own and his wife's interests in mind. He viewed, and treated, the companies as cyphers, and all moneys that they received as monies of his and his wife's savings and protection business…The judge's conclusion that Mr Backhouse was conducting the defence of the petitions in his own and his wife's business interests, and not those of the companies, reflected in my view both the evidence (particularly his solicitors' letter dated 12 June 1998) and the reality."
"A number of the decided cases have sought to catalogue the main principles governing the proper exercise of this discretion and their Lordships, rather than undertake an exhaustive further survey of the many relevant cases, would seek to summarise the position as follows. (1) Although costs orders against non-parties are to be regarded as "exceptional", exceptional in this context means no more than outside the ordinary run of cases where parties pursue or defend claims for their own benefit and at their own expense. The ultimate question in any such "exceptional" case is whether in all the circumstances it is just to make the order. It must be recognised that this is inevitably to some extent a fact-specific jurisdiction and that there will often be a number of different considerations in play, some militating in favour of an order, some against. (2) Generally speaking the discretion will not be exercised against "pure funders", described in para 40 of Hamilton v Al Fayed (No 2) [2003] QB 1175, 1194 as "those with no personal interest in the litigation, who do not stand to benefit from it, are not funding it as a matter of business, and in no way seek to control its course". In their case the court's normal approach is to give priority to the public interest in the funded party getting access to justice over that of the successful unfunded party recovering his costs and so not having to bear the expense of vindicating his rights. (3) Where, however, the non-party not merely funds the proceedings but substantially also controls or at any rate is to benefit from them, justice will ordinarily require that, if the proceedings fail, he will pay the successful party's costs. The non-party in these cases is not so much facilitating access to justice by the party funded as himself gaining access to justice for his own purposes. He himself is the "real party" to the litigation, a concept repeatedly invoked throughout the jurisprudence – see, for example, the judgments of the High Court of Australia in the Knight case 174 CLR 178 and Millett LJ's judgment in Metalloy Supplies Ltd v MA (UK) Ltd [1997] 1 WLR 1613. Consistently with this approach, Phillips LJ described the non-party underwriters in TGA Chapman Ltd v Christopher [1998] 1 WLR 12, 22 as "the defendants in all but name". Nor, indeed, is it necessary that the non-party be "the only real party" to the litigation in the sense explained in the Knight case, provided that he is "a real party in…very important and critical respects": see Arundel Chiropractic Centre Pty Ltd v Deputy Comr of Taxation (2001) 179 ALR 406, 414, referred to in the Kebaro case [2003] FCAFC 5, at [96], [103] and [111]. Some reflection of this concept of "the real party" is to be found in CPR r 25.13(2)(f) which allows a security for costs order to be made where "the claimant is acting as a nominal claimant". (4) Perhaps the most difficult cases are those in which non-parties fund receivers or liquidators designed to advance the funder's own financial interests."
"In many cases a major consideration will be the reason for the non-party causing a party, normally but not always an insolvent company, to bring or defend the proceedings. If a non-party does so for his own financial benefit, either to gain the fruits of the litigation or to preserve assets in which the person has an interest, it may, depending on the circumstances, be appropriate to make an order for costs against that person. Relevant factors will include…whether, in all the circumstances, the bringing or defending of the claim – although in the end unsuccessful – was a reasonable course to adopt."
"21….the overall rationale [is] that it is wrong to allow someone to fund litigation in the hope of gaining a benefit without a corresponding risk that the person will share in the costs of the proceedings if they ultimately fail."
In Knight v. FP Special Assets Ltd (1992) 174 CLR 178 in the High Court of Australia Mason CJ and Deane J said (at 192/193):
"The category of case consists of circumstances where the party to the litigation is an insolvent person or man of straw, where the non-party has played an active part in the conduct of the litigation and where the non-party, or some person on whose behalf he or she is acting or by whom he or she has been appointed, has an interest in the subject matter of the litigation. Where the circumstances of the case fall within that category, an order for costs should be made against the non-party if the interests of justice require that it be made."
"29. In the light of these authorities their Lordships would hold that, generally speaking, where a non-party promotes and funds proceedings by an insolvent company solely or substantially for his own financial benefit, he should be liable for the costs if his claim or defence or appeal fails. As explained in the cases, however, that is not to say that orders will invariably be made in such cases, particularly, say, where the non-party is himself a director or liquidator who can realistically be regarded as acting in the interests of the company (and more especially its shareholders and creditors) than in his own interests."
"33. Thirdly, Associated submit that there was no impropriety involved in their promoting this appeal; on the contrary, they and the Todds had independently received encouraging advice from leading counsel. This cannot, however, avail them. The authorities establish that, whilst any impropriety or the pursuit of speculative litigation may of itself support the making of an order against a non-party, its absence does not preclude the making of such an order."
The authorities: causation
"It was not disputed that the conduct of the non-party must have been a cause of the applicant incurring the costs it seeks to recover. For Globe [the applicant] it was submitted that this requirement was satisfied by the obvious fact that the costs of Globe were incurred because of the defences and counterclaims maintained by the Firm ostensibly on behalf of GLS but in substance for its own benefit. Counsel for the Firm [ the non-party] contended that that was not enough. He submitted that all the circumstances which made the case exceptional must also be a cause of the costs sought to be recovered. He submitted that the proper question was "but for the exceptional circumstances would the costs sought have been incurred". I do not accept that submission. I accept that the costs claimed must have been caused to some extent by the non-party against whom the order is sought for otherwise it is hard to envisage any circumstance in which it could be just to order the non-party to pay them. But I do not see why they must be caused by all the factors which render the case exceptional. For example, one of the factors likely to be present in most, if not all, cases where an order is made is that the litigation was for the benefit of the non-party; but that is no reason to require that the costs were all incurred in obtaining that benefit."
Mr Graham relied on this passage.
"It cannot be right to make an order under section 51(3) of the 1981 Act unless the court is satisfied that the conduct of the person against whom the order is to be made has been causative of the costs which have been incurred by the person seeking the order. There must be a sufficient causal link between the person who is to pay the costs and the incurring of those costs. It is necessary to determine whether the conduct complained of is really an effective cause of the costs incurred."
"Issue (ii): causation
18. The Board was referred to very little authority on this issue, merely dicta from Hamilton v Al Fayed (No 2) [2003] QB ii75 and Gore (t/a Clayton Utz) v Justice Corpn Pty Ltd (2002) 189 ALR 712. In the Hamilton case [2003] QB 1175, Simon Brown LJ noted at p 1198, para 54 that: "there is ample authority" and "no dispute" but that "proof of causation is a necessary precondition to the making of a section 51 order against a non-party" before concluding, as a further ground for rejecting the application made in that case for costs against non-party funders, that some at least of the contribution "plainly did not cause Mr Al Fayed to incur any costs which he would not otherwise have incurred".
19. In the Gore case 189 ALR 712, 731, para 53, the Federal Court of Australia was clearly adopting the same approach when stating:
"Justice Corpn had nothing to do with the decision to institute those proceedings and it had nothing to do with any subsequent decision (prior to 21 April 1999) to prosecute those proceedings. There is no basis upon which Clayton Utz could claim its costs against Justice Corpn in respect of that period. As his Honour said, there was no causal connection between those costs being incurred and the involvement in the case of Justice Corpn."
20. Although the position may well be different when a number of non-parties act in concert, their Lordships are content to assume for the purposes of this application that a non-party could not ordinarily be made liable for costs if those costs would in any event have been incurred without such non-party's involvement in the proceedings. On the facts of this case, however, their Lordships conclude that, but for Associated's involvement, the Todds would not have pursued their appeal to the Court of Appeal and thus occasioned the costs both in that court and on the further appeal to the Privy Council."
Discussion and conclusion
Lord Justice May: