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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 >> Guy v Pannone LLP [2009] EWCA Civ 30 (10 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/30.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 30 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE LANGAN Q.C.
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
____________________
TREVOR GUY |
Applicant Appellant |
|
- and - |
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PANNONE LLP |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Paul Parker (instructed by Pannone LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 9 December 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
i) On 23 June 2006 Mr Guy applied in the Harrogate County Court to set aside the statutory demand, which was dated 26 May 2006, and had been served in June, making an affidavit in support of his application. He then made a witness statement dated 13 November 2006. Mr Megaw made a witness statement in answer dated 24 November 2006. Mr Guy responded with a witness statement dated 1 December 2006, and another dated 5 February 2007.
ii) On 17 September 2007 Mr Guy issued proceedings against Pannone in negligence, in the Manchester District Registry of the Chancery Division. The Particulars of Claim, verified by a statement of truth by Mr Guy, are dated 3 October 2007. The Defence and Counterclaim is dated 1 November 2007. Pannone applied for judgment under Part 24, or for the claim to be struck out. In support of that application Mr Megaw made a witness statement dated 27 February 2008, to which many documents from Pannone's files are exhibited. The hearing before Judge Langan of the application to set aside the statutory demand came a week later on 6 March 2008. The judge did not allow Counsel for Pannone to refer to Mr Megaw's recent witness statement in the negligence claim, but it is before us, at Mr Guy's request, by virtue of Stanley Burnton LJ's order. At the time of the hearing of this appeal no answering witness statement from Mr Guy had been put before this court. However, afterwards Mr Guy's solicitors supplied the court with a copy of a witness statement made by him in answer on 14 March 2008. It seemed to us that it would be right to take account of its contents, and Pannone did not disagree, on being given the opportunity to comment on it. (We have not, however, taken into account another document supplied to us at that stage which seemed to be put forward as being an exhibit (or part of it) to the witness statement. We were told by Pannone that it had not in fact been exhibited to the witness statement, and it does not correspond to the description within the witness statement of the contents of the exhibit to that witness statement. Because of the disputed status of the document it would be inappropriate to allow it to be referred to at this late stage.) In December 2007 Mr Guy had applied for permission to amend his Particulars of Claim, and we have the amended as well as the original version. He did not obtain permission to amend, though it seems that, on the application for judgment in favour of Pannone, his alternative version of the statement of case was considered before judgment was given for Pannone.
"103. … The relevant information is to be found in HCW's Statement of Circumstances connected with their resignation, dated 29th January 2004, treating it as admissible hearsay evidence which has not been challenged by anyone other than Shaid himself (as I shall describe in due course). His challenge may safely be rejected, as has every other aspect of his wholly unsuccessful attempt to justify his conduct.
104. The Statement of Circumstances stated that Lexi had, at Shaid's direction, sought to register itself for VAT, with the stated intention of making a taxable supply by undertaking a residential property development, so as to obtain a basis for reclaiming input taxes, otherwise unavailable to a company engaged merely in the provision of bridging loans. For that purpose Shaid had informed HCW that Lexi was in the process of demolishing and rebuilding a property known as 27 Willoughby Road, but he initially supplied builder's invoices evidencing only a refurbishment rather than a rebuilding. On it being pointed out by HCW that refurbishment rather than new building was insufficient for VAT purposes, Shaid then stated that the invoice must have been made out incorrectly, and undertook to provide a correct replacement invoice. In the meantime, in December 2003 HCW prudently inspected the exterior of 27 Willoughby Road and discovered that there was no evidence of the building having been demolished or rebuilt. Thereafter on 15th January 2004 HCW were supplied with an invoice for £830,000 odd dated 4th June 2003 apparently for the demolition and rebuilding of 27 Willoughby Road, together with apparently relevant architect's drawings of the intended new building.
105. HCW then faced Shaid with the fruits of their research, only to be told that there had been a mistake, and that the building which had been demolished was 32 Willoughby Road. HCW then inspected 32 Willoughby Road, which appeared to be a Victorian building with no evidence of recent demolition or reconstruction. Despite this Shaid then produced a letter from the builders purporting to state that their earlier invoice wrongly misdescribed the subject matter of their activities at 27 Willoughby Road. These exchanges took place in December 2003 and January 2004, and were followed by Shaid presenting HCW with a letter from Lexi dismissing them as auditors with effect from 26th January 2003. Their Statement concluded as follows:
"In the light of the circumstances described above, we do not believe we have received satisfactory explanations of the questions that we raised with the company. We, therefore, believe we have not received the information and explanations we were entitled to under section 389A(1) CA 1985 and in particular information and explanations which would have reasonably have been required from the officers of the company for the performance of our duties as auditors. Accordingly, we have resigned from our position as auditors of the company on 29th January 2004.
We wish to bring the above matters to the attention of members and creditors of the company."
106. Although politely phrased, the Statement of Circumstances shows that HCW had caught out Shaid in the commission of an attempted VAT fraud, and that he had upon their inquiry attempted to cover his tracks, either by procuring self-serving letters from builders in cahoots with him or, more simply, by fabricating those letters.
107. …
108. HCW's Statement of Circumstances did not however come to the attention of any of Lexi's creditors, or even of its directors other than Shaid himself, before November 2004. …
109. Shaid achieved this remarkable cover-up of HCW's resignation statement by an application under section 394(6) of the Companies Act 1985, pursuant to which:
"If the court is satisfied that the auditor is using the statement to secure needless publicity for defamatory matter-
(a) it shall direct that copies of the statement need not be sent out, …"
110. Shaid's case was (necessarily) that the contents of the Statement of Circumstances were untrue. To make that case good he made a witness statement and produced further documents. The proceedings were not finally determined until 27th October 2004, before HH Judge Howarth, sitting as a deputy High Court Judge in the Manchester District Registry. By that time, having successfully gagged HCW while negotiating a doubling of Lexi's loan facility, and the syndication of its loans, Shaid had caused Lexi to abandon the claim, and the issue before Judge Howarth was whether HCW, as defendant, should obtain an order for indemnity costs, in relation to which Lexi was not represented, nor Shaid present at the hearing, although both the court documents and HCW's evidence and skeleton argument had been duly served.
111. After hearing submissions from counsel for HCW, and thoroughly reading the documents, Judge Howarth made an order for indemnity costs, upon the basis that Lexi's claim under section 394(6) was, from start to finish, an abuse of process. He said this:
"It seems to me that these proceedings were as clear an abuse of the process of this court as it would be possible to find. This case is a very much stronger case than Jarvis v. Price Waterhouse Cooper was. Whatever may or may not be the case with Jarvis, it was not a case of dishonesty, and certainly not a case where fraudulent documents were being created, was certainly not a case where there was any form of perjury. It seems to me that this is as clear a case involving those as any I have come across for a long time. In the circumstances I have no hesitation in awarding indemnity costs."
He continued:
"I have invited a representative of the Crown Prosecution Service to sit in the back of this court. It seems to me that there are a number of criminal offences which a judge, in exercising his public duty, simply cannot turn a blind eye to. I am proposing to pass over to the Crown Prosecution Service the two bundles of documents that have been lodged. It may be that they will in due course think it right to bring proceedings for a number of criminal offences, including perjury against Mr Luqman."
112. Freed from the gag constituted by the existence of those proceedings, HCW reported to Barclays on 12th November by letter, including both a copy of their Statement of Circumstances and a copy of the transcript of the proceedings before Judge Howarth, including his judgment. …"
"Ms Gregory [who had addressed him on points of law] suggested that had Barclays been told prior to the execution of the charge about Mr Luqman's fraud, they might have abstained from taking the charge. That is to my mind speculative. On the contrary, evidence of Mr Luqman's dishonesty might well have made the bank all the more anxious to obtain security for moneys which it had advanced."
"With the greatest of respect to what Judge Langan says there, and I understand perfectly why he took the view that he did, it seems to me that it is necessary to grasp the nettle of what is meant by "mistake". In that respect, while the scope of the phrase "correcting a mistake" is no doubt something that requires to be explored and discussed and developed in the course of future litigation, which will be decided upon the facts and upon the merits of each case, I cannot see that it is arguable that the registration of the charge can be said to have been a mistake, or the result of a mistake, unless at the least Mr Guy can go so far as to show that the bank, the mortgagee, had either actual notice, or what amounts to the same, what is referred to as "Nelsonian" or "blind eye notice", of the defect in the title of the mortgagor, Ten Acre Limited in the present case. I simply cannot see how it could be argued that if the purchaser or chargee knows nothing of the problem underlying the intermediate owner's title, that the registration of the charge or sale to the ultimate purchaser or chargee can be said to be a mistake. That seems to me inconsistent with the structure and terms of the 2002 Act. So the question is whether Mr Guy can show an arguable case, on the evidence, for saying that Barclays Bank had actual notice or was turning a blind eye to matters that it knew, which would if it addressed them properly, have shown it that Ten Acre Limited did not have a good title to the property."
Lord Justice Moore-Bick
Lord Justice Pill