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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 >> Griffith & Anor v Gourgey & Ors [2017] EWCA Civ 926 (05 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/926.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 926 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE SIMON
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LADY JUSTICE SHARP DBE
____________________
NICHOLAS JOHN CLWYD GRIFFITH & ANR |
Respondents/ Petitioners |
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- and - |
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MAURICE SALEH GOURGEY & ORS |
Appellants/ (Respondents to the Petition) |
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Mr Christopher R Parker QC & Mr Oliver Phillips (instructed by Blake Morgan LLP) for the Petitioners
Hearing dates: 27th June 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Longmore:
1. The initial Part 18 Requests were made by the petitioners on 3rd September 2013. The appellants initially proposed that a response would be provided by 22nd October 2013, without suggesting that any objection was taken to the content of the Part 18 Requests. The petitioners agreed that timeframe on 17th September 2013.
2. The appellants then objected to the content of the Part 18 Requests on 4th October 2013, over a month after they had been served, on the grounds that they were "neither reasonable nor proportionate". The petitioners therefore applied on 15th November 2013 for an order requiring the Part 18 Requests to be answered.
3. In the event, that application, together with an application by the appellants seeking to strike out parts of the pleadings, was disposed of by a consent order made by Mr Hollington QC (sitting as a High Court Judge) on 27th February 2014. Paragraph 5 of that order provided that the appellants "do provide a full response to [the Part 18 Requests] by 4 p.m. on 21st March 2014".
4. The appellants did not provide any response (full or otherwise) to the Part 18 Requests by 4 p.m. on 21st March 2014. Rose J therefore made an unless order at a CMC on 4th April 2014, requiring them to file and serve their responses to the Part 18 Requests by 4 p.m. on 22nd April 2014, failing which the amended points of defence ("the defences") would be struck out. That order has never been appealed.
5. The appellants served a purported response to the Part 18 Requests (the "First Response") shortly before the deadline of 4 p.m. on 22nd April 2014.
6. The petitioners then issued an application dated 27th May 2014 seeking directions to be given for the future conduct of the proceedings on the footing that the defences stood struck out.
7. The appellants issued a cross-application dated 5th June 2014, seeking relief from sanctions.
8. Following a hearing of those two applications on 13th November 2014, Mr Monty QC (also sitting as a High Court Judge) determined that the First Response was deficient in various respects, and that the reason given by the appellants for the deficiencies (that the nature and extent of the Part 18 Requests was excessive) was one which not having been taken before Mr Hollington QC or Rose J, it was not open to them to take. Nevertheless he was persuaded, in his discretion, to grant relief from the strike-out sanction on strict conditions, including that the appellants would by 4th December 2014 serve a full and complete response to the Part 18 Requests; he so ordered on 13th November 2014 ("the Monty Order").
9. The appellants served their purported full and complete response on 4th December 2014 ("the Second Response").
10. The petitioners took issue with the adequacy of the Second Response, and applied on 29th January 2015 for relief on the footing that the defences remained struck out.
11. On 4th February 2015 the appellants applied for a second time for relief from sanctions.
12. Following a hearing of those applications on 23rd and 24th March 2015, Simon J gave judgment on 23rd April 2015, finding that the Second response was not, even now, a full and complete Response to the Part 18 Requests, that in consequence the conditions laid down in the Monty Order for the grant of relief from sanction had not been met, and that the defences accordingly remained struck out as from 22nd April 2014. He additionally refused the appellants' further application for relief from sanctions, on the basis that there had been no material change of circumstances since the Monty Order which remained in force.
"UPON the respondents [whom I have called the appellants] having been further required by paragraphs 3 and 4 of the order of the Honourable Mrs Justice Rose dated 4th April 2014 (the "Unless Order") to file and serve their response to the RFI [request for further information] by 4 p.m. on 22nd April 2014, failing which the points of defence would be struck out.
AND UPON the respondents having filed and served by 4 p.m. on 22nd April 2014 a response to the RFI that was plainly incomplete and insufficient, with the result that the amended points of defence stand struck out pursuant to paragraph 4 of the Unless Order (subject to the relief application).
AND UPON the Court considering that it is appropriate to grant relief from the sanction applied by paragraph 4 of the Unless Order strictly on the terms set out in this Order, and that in the absence of truly extraordinary circumstances the respondents should not be permitted to participate in the future conduct of these petitions if those terms are not strictly adhered to.
AND UPON READING the third witness statement of Paul Matthew Caldicott dated 27th May 2014, the witness statement of Jonathan Hill dated 5th June 2014, and the fourth witness statement of Paul Matthew Caldicott dated 18th July 2014.
AND UPON HEARING leading counsel for the appellants and counsel for the respondents
IT IS ORDERED that:
…
4. If the respondents do:
(a) by 4 p.m. on 27th November 2014 pay the costs ordered to be paid by paragraph 10 of this order in full in cleared funds by transfer into the client account of Blake Morgan LLP at Barclays Bank plc, Oxford City Branch, 54 Cornmarket Street, Oxford OX1 3HB …
(b) By 4 p.m. on 4th December 2014 file with the Court and serve on the petitioners a full and complete response to (1) the RFI and (2) any request made under paragraph 1 of this order to which paragraph 3 of this order applies,
the amended points of defence shall be reinstated.
5. For the avoidance of all doubt, the response to be provided by the respondents under paragraph 4 (h) of this order shall:
(a) be verified with a statement of truth in accordance with Part 22 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998, and
(b) give a full and complete response to each and every request made in the RFIs and to any request made under paragraph 1 of this order to which paragraph 3 of this order applies,
and a response that fails to comply in all respects with the provisions of this paragraph at the time when it is filed and served shall be treated as not having been filed and served for the purposes of paragraph 4 of this order.
…"
1. He agreed with counsel for the respondents that once the consent order of Mr Hollington QC had been made the appellants "could not thereafter decline to comply with the order so far as compliance was possible", and that their failure to comply had been a deliberate decision made for a reason – namely that the Part 18 Requests were too wide and extensive - which was not open to them to rely on, given that they had consented to provide a full response.
2. He agreed that the appellants had failed to answer the Part 18 Requests in all the ways alleged by the respondents, although for the purposes of his judgment he limited himself to citing just eight examples of the non-compliance.
3. He felt that the evidence before him "as a whole falls short but not far short of establishing a clear course of conduct deliberately designed to delay the hearing" on the part of the appellants (para 48).
4. While he in the end considered it appropriate to grant relief on the stringent terms described above he added that "Without wishing to fetter the discretion of the court in the future, it should be noted that, barring something extraordinary, the court would expect complete compliance with such an order and would not look kindly upon any further application for relief under either limb" (para 63).
The judgment of Simon J
This appeal
"On the application for relief from any sanction imposed for a failure to comply with any rule, practice direction or court order, the court will consider all the circumstances of the case, so as to enable it to deal justly with the application, including the need –
a) for litigation to be conducted efficiently and at proportionate cost; and
b) to enforce compliance with rules, practice directions and orders."
He then submitted that there was nothing in the rule imposing any requirement that there should be any change in circumstances between one application for relief and another.
"The discretion [exercisable under CPR r 3.1(7)] might be appropriately exercised normally only (i) where there had been a material change of circumstances since the order was made; (ii) where the facts on which the original decision was made had been misstated; or (iii) where there had been a manifest mistake on the part of the judge in formulating the order. Moreover, as the court emphasised, the application must be made promptly. This reasoning has equal validity in the context of an application under CPR r 3.9."
"18 However, even if that were not right, it appears to me that, as a matter of ordinary principle, when a court has made an interlocutory order, it is not normally open to a party subsequently to ask for relief which effectively requires that order to be varied or rescinded, save if there has been a material change in circumstances since the order was made. As was observed by Buckley LJ in Chanel Ltd v FW Woolworth & Co Ltd [1981] 1 WLR 485, 492-493:
"Even in interlocutory matters a party cannot fight over again a battle which has already been fought unless there has been some significant change of circumstances, or the party has become aware of facts which he could not reasonably have known, or found out, in time for the first encounter."
Accordingly, even if CPR r 3.1(7) did not apply to the second relief application, it appears clear that the defendants would have faced the same hurdle before the deputy judge. That conclusion also derives support from the last sentence in para 44 in the Mitchell case [2014] 1 WLR 795, quoted in para 15 above.
19 There was no question of the facts having been misstated by Hildyard J or of manifest mistake in formulating his order. Accordingly, unless (perhaps) they could show that this was not a "normal" case, the defendants had to establish a material change in circumstances since the hearing before Hildyard J before the deputy judge could properly consider the second relief application on its merits. Mr Letman was unable to point to any factors which rendered this case relevantly not normal. Accordingly, I reject the defendants' first point."
"in which relief against sanctions could or should be granted in view of the history of the litigation and the form of the relief order."
Conclusion
Lady Justice Sharp: