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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 >> Clearway Drainage Systems Ltd v Miles Smith Ltd [2016] EWCA Civ 1258 (08 November 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/1258.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 1258 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
(HER HONOUR JUDGE MOULDER)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE KING
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CLEARWAY DRAINAGE SYSTEMS LIMITED | Applicant | |
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MILES SMITH LIMITED | Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A DTI Company
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr A Schaff QC and Mr T Bell (instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Terence Etherton, MR:
The background
Procedural history
"By 4.00 pm on 8 April 2016 all parties must serve on each other copies of the signed statements of themselves and of all witnesses on whom they intend to rely and all notices relating to evidence."
"Should it come to light that the Claimant is in possession of any confidential information revealed by you, we are fully prepared to take action against you for damages resulting from a breach of your contractual terms of employment."
"We are not aware of anything that requires a change to the timetable... Should matters arise as a result of the exchange of witness evidence, the timetable for resolution of these will be a matter for the judge."
"Although the original timetable provided for exchange of witness statements as to fact by today, 8 April, it is quite clear that witness statements cannot and should not be exchanged until disclosure has been fully complied with and the question of intimidation and interference with any witnesses has been resolved and removed."
"Your assertion that exchange of witness statements was impacted by the letter sent to Mr Smerdon is totally without merit. That letter was sent over one month prior to the date for exchange of witness evidence (being 8th April 2016)... You and your client, therefore, had plenty of time to consider the issue, yet chose only to write to us on the actual date of exchange. Nor could the issue have impacted upon any other witness statements that your client was intending to exchange. Those excuses for failing to comply with a court order are totally untenable... Your assertion that your client was unable to exchange witness evidence due to the absence of specific documents is unfounded. The first (and only) time you made the assertion came on the date of exchange itself. If it really was an issue that affected the parties' ability to exchange witness statements (which we deny), you should properly have raised it well before 8th April 2016. It is particularly weak given your client's pleaded case is that it relied solely on an oral presentation by Mr Smerdon rather than any written documentation."
The judge's decision
The appeal
"1.9. The Court's ability to meet the changing needs of the commercial community depends in part upon a steady flow of information and constructive suggestions between the Court, litigants and professional advisers..."
"1.11. The Mercantile Courts seek to operate in a way which gives effect to the overriding objective of dealing with cases justly and proportionately, is streamlined, accessible to non-lawyers and cost effective, promotes the early resolution of disputes where possible and actively manages through to trial the cases which do not settle."
"1.12. It is incumbent upon the parties to help the Court to achieve the overriding objective. They should co-operate courteously to achieve resolution at the lowest feasible cost and in the shortest practicable time. They should put their cards on the table from the outset. The Court expects a high level of co-operation and realism from their legal representatives... Parties who fail to observe these and other requirements of the overriding objective can expect to be ordered to pay the unnecessary costs incurred..."
"6.15. [Concerning the case management information sheet]. This is an essential aid to the understanding by the Court (and the other side) as to one party's assessment of how the case is expected to progress to trial, and its cost, along with the evidence to be called. Parties who fail to lodge it can expected to be penalised in costs in an appropriate case."
(1) the general desirability of having disclosure resolved on both sides before evidence in chief is filed and served; (2) Miles Smith's conscious failure to let Clearway consider in good time or at all the implications of its private decision; (3) Miles Smith's consequent breach of the governing Court Guide; (4) the unresolved Smerdon issue at the time the breach took place; (5) the fact that the trial could plainly still take place satisfactorily without disrupting the allocation of the court's resources; (6) the fact that as late as 9 June 2016 Miles Smith itself (in revisiting its disclosure concerns) was demonstrably anxious not to jeopardise the trial date; (7) proportionality of the effect of the sanction to the breach; (8) overall justice; (9) the need to discourage unnecessary satellite litigation.
Discussion
"We recognise that CPR 3.9 requires the court to consider "all the circumstances of the case, so as to enable it to deal justly with the application". The reference to dealing with the application "justly" is a reference back to the definition of the "overriding objective". This definition includes ensuring that the parties are on an equal footing and that a case is dealt with expeditiously and fairly as well as enforcing compliance with rules, practice directions and orders. The reference to "all the circumstances of the case" in CPR 3.9 might suggest that a broad approach should be adopted. We accept that regard should be had to all the circumstances of the case. That is what the rule says. But (subject to the guidance that we give below) the other circumstances should be given less weight than the two considerations which are specifically mentioned."
"We can see that the use of the phrase "paramount importance" in para 36 of Mitchell has encouraged the idea that the factors other than factors (a) and (b) [in CPR 3.9(1)] are of little weight. On the other hand, at para 37 the court merely said that the other circumstances should be given "less weight" than the two considerations specifically mentioned. This may have given rise to some confusion which we now seek to remove. Although the two factors may not be of paramount importance, we reassert that they are of particular importance and should be given particular weight at the third stage when all the circumstances of the case are considered. That is why they were singled out for mention in the rule."
"A judge should address an application for relief from sanctions in three stages. The first stage is to identify and assess the seriousness and significance of the "failure to comply with any rule, practice direction or court order" which engages rule 3.9(1). If the breach is neither serious nor significant, the court is unlikely to need to spend much time on the second and third stages. The second stage is to consider why the default occurred. The third stage is to evaluate "all the circumstances of the case, so as to enable [the court] to deal justly with the application including [factors (a) and (b)]"."
"60. In conclusion, I accept that the trial date can be maintained and the defendant's solicitors are in my view adequately resourced to deal with a truncated timetable. However, as I have indicated the test is broader than whether the trial date can be kept. I have referred above to the impact on the conduct of the litigation and it seems to me that time and money has been wasted by the claimant's continuing and repeated failures in this regard.
60. As to promptness, the claimant was aware from 18 April that the defendant objected to the failure to exchange witness statements, but Mr Usden decided that he would take his own approach and pursue the issues of disclosure with Mr Smerdon. Not only did he not make a protective application, as his counsel termed it, but even when he was facing a possible summary judgment application, following the PTR on 26 May he did not take action promptly. The delay and failure has nothing to do with the PTR being put off from 17 May to 26 May, as Mr Usden has suggested. Even after 26 May, Mr Usden did not see the need to prioritise his claim over his other work. He took his own view of what would be acceptable in terms of filing an application for relief. He ignored the rules about filing three clear days before a hearing application. He served the witness statements but decided to prevent the defendant from accessing them. He took no action in respect of the witness summary until prompted to do so by the Court at the second PTR hearing. Repeatedly, despite two adjournments of the PTR, it seems he has taken his own view of what is acceptable.
61. I accept and I have considered carefully the fact that the claimant in this matter has itself done nothing wrong, that his representative, it seems, has chosen to ignore the rules and caused disruption and expense to the defendant and the court. The fact that Mr Usden genuinely appears to have been of the view that he was entitled to take the approach that he did in the face of the stance taken by the defendant on disclosure, witness statements and Mr Smerdon does not in my view support a conclusion that relief should be granted."
"Counsel for the Claimant submitted that the claimant was, therefore, placed under a misapprehension and the defendant did nothing to disabuse the claimant of that misapprehension, having taken the decision some time earlier that the defendant would not after all call any witnesses."
"28. Although it could be argued that the late service of the witness statements in this particular case has not imperilled the trial date, it seems to me that the failure for over two months to serve witness statements and to serve them less than a month before trial does affect the efficient progress of the litigation and even if no particular prejudice is identified. Such a prolonged failure over a period of months must be viewed by the court as serious or significant."
"54. I do have to weigh and I have weighed very carefully the fact that if relief from sanctions is refused, the Claimant's case would effectively be at an end. This clearly weighs in favour of granting relief."
"As to the witness statements from Mr Smerdon, even if the position of Mr Smerdon as a witness was unclear at 8 April, the obvious course was to apply for an extension while the matter was investigated further. Once Mr Smerdon indicated on 3 June his position, that was the point at which at the latest an application should have been made to provide a witness summary. Again, it is difficult to understand why no steps were taken at all until the matter was raised on the PTR on 14 June, finally leading to an application on 16 June."
Conclusion