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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 >> Hicks v Russell Jones & Walker [2007] EWCA Civ 844 (12 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/844.html Cite as: [2009] 1 WLR 487, [2008] 2 All ER 1089, [2007] EWCA Civ 844, [2009] WLR 487 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE HENDERSON)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
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HICKS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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RUSSELL JONES & WALKER |
Respondent |
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Mr B Livesey QC and Mr M Parker (instructed by Messrs Barlow Lyde Gilbert) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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(AS APPROVED BY THE COURT)
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
"13. Reading the pleadings, the claimants' skeleton argument, the Notice of Appeal and the skeleton argument put in by Mr Hicks, Mr Hicks' strongest point appeared to me to be one not raised by him in direct terms, although I think that it is encompassed by certain of his grounds of appeal. It is as follows. The judge found that the solicitors were negligent in two respects: failing to take proper instructions from Mr Hicks and failing to obtain advice from leading counsel in proper time."
"14. As I have indicated, he went on to consider what would have happened if Mr Brindle [that is to say leading counsel] had been consulted earlier, but the point which has concerned me is that the judgment does not address the following separate question: given that the solicitors did not instruct Mr Brindle in time, what ought they to have done and what consequences flowed from their failure to obtain earlier instructions from Mr Hicks?"
"15. It seems to me, at least on an arguable basis, that there are two different issues here: the failure to obtain timely advice from Mr Brindle and the failure to take proper instructions from Mr Hicks. Given that they did not obtain proper advice from Mr Brindle, the claimant arguably is entitled to approach the matter not simply by considering what would have happened if Mr Brindle had been instructed in time, but also what would have happened if they had taken proper instructions from Mr Hicks in the context of their inability to arrange a conference with Mr Brindle."
My Lord went on and referred to submissions both ways and he held, as I say, that grounds 1 and 3 were arguable and ground 2 not.
"Ground 1 is that the judge failed to find that the respondent was in breach of contract in failing to obtain expert evidence in good time to answer the August 1991 valuation. That does seem to me to cross the threshold of arguability, on the basis that if they had properly sought Mr Hicks' instructions that is what they would and should have done."
I am quoting there from paragraph 22.
"Accordingly, we recommend the following course. If an application for permission to appeal on the ground of lack of reasons is made to the trial judge, the judge should consider whether his judgment is defective for lack of reasons, adjourning for that purpose should he find this necessary. If he concludes that it is, he should set out to remedy the defect by the provision of additional reasons, refusing permission to appeal on the basis that he has adopted that course. If he concludes that he has given adequate reasons, he will no doubt refuse permission to appeal. If an application for permission to appeal on the ground of lack of reasons is made to the appellate court and it appears to the appellate court that the application is well founded, it should consider adjourning the application and remitting the case to the trial judge with an invitation to provide additional reasons for his decision or, where appropriate, his reasons for a specific finding or findings. Where the appellate court is in doubt as to whether the reasons are adequate, it may be appropriate to direct that the application be adjourned to an oral hearing, on notice to the respondent."
This is not that sort of case at all because the judge has given perfectly adequate reasons for his conclusions. They may or may not be right and that is the matter that would be at issue on the appeal, but he has not failed to give reasons for his conclusion. What he has failed to do, arguably, is to cover matters that would or do arise only contingently, in the event that he is held to have been wrong on a particular aspect.
"I understand it is accepted that in those circumstances that the arrest was wrongful and the subsequent prosecution malicious. If it was not accepted, as I thought it was, then I will have to hear further argument on the basis that the findings I have made as to whether a different conclusion should be reached but it seems to me that given the circumstances, as I have found them to be, the arrest was unlawful and so was the following prosecution malicious."
"For what it is worth in the circumstances I have found I would acquit the claimant of assault whether deliberate or reckless."
And he went on to make other findings entirely consistent with his original decision.
"If it was the case that the court considering the original grounds of appeal might have so ordered, why should the court not take advantage of already having the fruits of that inquiry without having to order it?"
He said:
"It would be wholly artificial and wrong if the court did not take account of what [the judge] had found [at the second hearing]."
Accordingly he dealt with the matter on that footing and dismissed the appeal.
"Given that the respondents failed to arrange a conference with leading counsel to consider the August 1991 valuation in proper time, what (if anything) ought they have to have done by way of obtaining further instructions from Mr Hicks and what consequences flowed from not obtaining earlier instructions from Mr Hicks."
That is the one question which, put generally, seems to me to embrace all the points that either side would wish to put before the judge, leaving the judge free, as he would have been at the trial, to decide how he wishes to deal with it, what points he needs to and can and properly should make findings on and what, of course, those findings should be.
Lord Justice Toulson:
Order: Direction.