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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Wilkinson v West Coast Capital & Ors [2005] EWHC 1606 (Ch) (22 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/1606.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1606 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF NEW GADGET SHOP LIMITED and
THE GADGET SHOP LIMITED
And
IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 1985
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
PETER ROBERT WILKINSON |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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WEST COAST CAPITAL & ORS |
Respondents |
____________________
MR. J. ONIONS Q.C. and MR. B. STRONG (instructed by McGrigors London) for the 1st, 3rd, 4th and 6th Respondents.
MR. D. SPITZ (instructed by Bevan Brittan LLP) for the 2nd and 5th Respondents.
Hearing dates: 18th JULY 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
Minor Issues
i) Disclosure applications were made by various of the defendants. Disclosure was sought of certain specified documents as against the petitioner and as against a Mr Wood, for whom the petitioner holds various of his shares as trustee. In the end Mr Michael Crystal QC, who appeared for the petitioner, accepted that there should be an order for disclosure by list of the relevant category of documents within 14 days. For these purposes he was able to accept this on behalf of Mr Wood as well. I therefore order that disclosure within 14 days.
ii) There was originally a dispute as to whether or not the court should make an order as to the order in which the defendants call their witnesses. In the end that was not pursued before me, and Mr Crystal indicated that there should instead be a date by which the claimant would be told of the order in which the defendants' witnesses would be called. Mr Onions QC, who appeared for the 1st, 3rd, 4th and 6th respondents ("the WCC respondents") resisted this notion. Alternatively, he said, if there were to be a date it should be 14th October, which is approximately two weeks before the trial is likely to start. This is a factually complex s.459 petition, with some interlocking of evidence. It will be helpful to each party to know the order in which the other propose to call witnesses, but I do not think that it will be either helpful or necessary to make that too binding. The course of trials is often so fluid as to require flexibility in the order of calling witnesses, and sometimes questions such as the convenience of witnesses has to be addressed. I would therefore not wish to lay down anything which could be construed as a rigid timetable from which the parties could only depart with difficulty. I shall order that each party shall inform the other by 14th October 2005 of the order in which they then intend to call their respective witnesses and that thereafter, up until the opening of the trial, 48 hours' notice be given of any intention to change that order. During the trial that order may be departed from by agreement between the parties or with the permission of the trial judge.
iii) There has been an order for a joint expert to be instructed in this case. There was a dispute as to whether he should be ordered to produce his report by the end of August or by the end of September. He was not represented before me, but a letter from him was placed before me which to some extent gave his views as to the proposed timings. In the light of that letter I shall order that he use his reasonable endeavours to produce his report by 4 p.m. on Wednesday 14th September; and that in any event he produce it by 4 p.m. on Friday 23rd September 2005. There must be a long stop date, and the purpose of this two-limb order is to indicate to him that in fact it would be desirable, if possible, that the report be produced before the long stop date.
iv) Questions for the expert. There was a dispute as to certain questions which the respondents propose to put to the expert, since they were said by the petitioner not to go to the specific question which the expert was asked to address at this point, namely the basis (but not quantification) of the valuation of shares if (as the petitioner claimed) the respondents were to be ordered to buy out the petitioner's shares. This dispute fizzled out when I proposed that the expert be required to address those points so far as (but only so far as) they went to the question of the basis of the valuation. I shall therefore so order.
v) Timetabling for the trial was floated before me but no-one (rightly in my view) asked me to make an order; I shall therefore not do so. At least one of the parties also flagged a potential dispute about how the costs of a livenote transcript would initially be borne. Very wisely, the parties decided to agree this matter without putting it before me for a ruling.
The witness statement issues
"A point comes at which literal admissibility has to yield to the constraints of proportionality… such proportionality may in any one case depend on issues of remoteness, fairness, usefulness, the ratio of cost benefit in terms of time or money and other things besides."
Hoffman LJ approved that, with one slight modification:
"I think I would prefer 'relevance' to 'literal admissibility' but the general tenor of this passage expresses the principle which I have tried to explain in my own words, namely that in some cases a ruling on admissibility may involve weighing a degree of relevance against 'other things'."
"7.1 On 19th September 2003 the parties reached an agreement in principle to resolve this dispute. Negotiations in respect of the details broke down finally in February 2004.
7.2 The Investors simply abandoned the agreement reached in principle after some five months of costly negotiations with the assistance of lawyers and accountants.
7.3 The Petitioner will contend that the Investors were not negotiating in good faith but were, rather, temporising.
7.4 This further contributes to the distrust in which the Petitioner holds the Investors.
7.5 The Investors have since made open offers to the Petitioner including that he be bought out on the valuation of an independent valuer. However, the only bases on which the investors have been prepared to allow such an independent valuer to provide such a valuation falls far short of the valuation to which the Petitioner contends that he is entitled…."
The expression "Investors" is intended to connote various of the active respondents; it does not matter for these purposes which, but they include Sir Thomas Hunter.
"It had become increasingly obvious over the course of my dealings with Mr Hunter that he was not a man of his word and that he was not somebody who could be trusted."
He was not surprised that Mr Hunter had "reneged on his word again".
i) The "without prejudice" rule must be applied carefully and only in cases to which the public interest which underlies the rule requires it to be applied. This is apparent from the judgment of Sir Andrew Morritt V-C in Prudential Assurance Company Limited v The Prudential Insurance Company of America [2002] EWHC 2809 at para 27. He said there:
"Article 10 [ECHR, s.12(1) of the Human Rights Act 1998] confers on everyone the right of freedom to expression, including the right 'to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers'. But that right is subject to such restrictions as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society for the protection of the rights of others. Prima facie, therefore, the right is engaged by the 'without prejudice' rule but justified by the public interests which underlie it. But what this part of the case does is emphasise the need to apply the 'without prejudice' rule with restraint and only in cases to which the public interests underlying the rule are plainly applicable."
I therefore approach the argument with a clear eye to the purpose of the principles and rules involved.
ii) The fact that the rule is based on the need to protect against admissions against interest appears from the judgment of Robert Walker LJ in Unilever plc v Procter and Gamble [2000] 1 WLR 2437. At page 2448 he said:
"In those circumstances I consider that this court should, in determining this appeal, give effect to the principles stated in the modern cases, especially Cutts v Head, Rush & Tompkins and Muller. Whatever difficulties there are in a complete reconciliation of these cases, they make clear that the without prejudice rule is founded partly in public policy and partly in the agreement of the parties. They show that the protection of admissions against interest is the most important practical effect of the rule. But to dissect out identifiable admissions and withhold protection from the rest of without prejudice communications (except for a special reason) would not only create huge practical difficulties but would be contrary to the underlying objective of giving protection to the parties in the words of Lord Griffiths in Rush & Tompkins at page 1300:
'To speak freely about all issues in the litigation both factual and legal when seeking compromise and, for the purposes of establishing a basis of compromise, admitting certain facts.'
The parties cannot speak freely at a without prejudice meeting if they must constantly monitor every sentence, with lawyers or patent agents sitting at their shoulders as minders."
iii) Mr Crystal may well be correct in saying that negotiating in bad faith would disentitle a party to rely on the "without prejudice" rubric. In Unilever plc v Procter and Gamble at page 2444, Robert Walker LJ said:
"(4) Apart from any concluded contract or estoppel, one party may be allowed to give evidence of what the other said or wrote in without prejudice negotiations if the exclusion of the evidence would act as a cloak for perjury, blackmail or other 'unambiguous impropriety' (the expression used by Hoffman LJ in Forster v Friedland…)…but this court has, in Forster v Friedland and Fazil Alizadeh v Nikbin…warned that the exception should be applied only in the clearest cases of abuse of a privileged occasion."
Negotiating in bad faith, intending to temporise for some purpose or otherwise mislead the counterparty into thinking that the temporiser was intending to reach a settlement, would probably fall within this wording. However, it seems to me that strong evidence must be available to support a case where that has happened. It is an allegation that is likely to occur to many litigants in highly charged litigation, and the courts must be careful not to allow distracting attempts to open up without prejudice negotiations on the basis of simple assertions or expressions of feeling.