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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 >> Fulham Leisure Holdings Ltd. v Nicholson Graham & Jones [2006] EWHC 158 (Ch) (14 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/158.html Cite as: [2006] 2 All ER 599, [2006] EWHC 158 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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FULHAM LEISURE HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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NICHOLSON GRAHAM & JONES |
Defendant |
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MR. R. STEWART Q.C. and MR. H. EVANS (instructed by Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw LLP) for the Defendant.
Hearing date: 30th January 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
"The documents setting out or recording the instructions received and/or work done and/or advice given by Mr Briggs, Mr Marshall and DJ Freeman in relation to the claimant's dispute with the Muddymans in the period 2nd October 2001 to 31st January 2002 as set out on the invoices and fee-notes disclosed for the first time on the evening of 19th January 2006."
The invoices are then more specifically identified.
(i) In paragraph 46 of the particulars of claim, the advice given by Mr Briggs in consultation is summarised in a number of sub-paragraphs. Paragraphs 47 and 48 go on to plead the consequences of that in terms of the position in which the claimant claims to have found itself.(ii) One of the witnesses in this case is Mr Benson himself. He gave evidence in general terms which confirmed that the references in fee notes which we see to Mr Briggs acting further, and his junior acting further, related to the present matter. That of itself cannot amount to a waiver, not least because Mr Benson, in giving that evidence, is not acting on behalf of the claimant, and Mr Stewart does not rely on that act as being part of the waiver. However, in his witness statement he refers to going to Mr Briggs for advice, and in one sentence summarises Mr Briggs' view.
(iii) In his second witness statement he refers again in general terms to going to see Mr Briggs to take his advice "in the circumstances I mentioned in paragraph 38 of my first witness statement. Thereafter DJ Freeman (as they then were) prepared a presentation to [Mr Al Fayed]….on the ways forward regarding the dilution issue, which took place in December 2001."
(iv) Mr Byrne, another witness, refers in his witness statement to advice in general and historical terms. He merely recites that Mr Benson went to get advice from DJ Freeman. There are later references to advice taken the next year from another leader, but that does not matter for present purposes.
(v) Mr Fallowfield, financial controller for the Harrods Group, has provided a witness statement in which he refers to the fact that Mr Benson sought advice from Mr Briggs and that further discussions with Mr al Fayed culminated in a meeting with a partner at DJ Freeman on 4th December 2001.
Of those witnesses, Mr Benson was part way through his oral evidence when this issue arose. The other two gentlemen had not yet given evidence.
"Mr Benson's Instructions are at E17/51- 53 and contain a helpful and important summary of Mr Benson's understanding and recollection in 2001 of the negotiations in 1997." (his emphasis)
Paragraph 124 lists various points that came out of the consultation and paragraph 125 summarises the situation as at that date, with Mr Briggs having advised. Paragraph 126 says very shortly that in the following months the claimant and Mr al Fayed considered what to do, and draws attention to the DJ Freeman slide show as being a "relevant document".
The arguments on privilege
"It also extends to attempted partial waiver of privilege in respect of certain of a number of documents relevant to the same issue or transaction. Of course, the scope for unfairness depends on the breadth of the matter in issue or their severability if more than one, and on the exact relationship and/or relevance to such issue(s) of the documents respectively disclosed and sought to be withheld."
He said that this authority justified resolving the present situation by reference to the principle of fairness.
The relevant principles and their application to this case
i) One should first identify the "transaction" in respect of which the disclosure has been made.
ii) That transaction may be identifiable simply from the nature of the disclosure made – for example, advice given by counsel on a single occasion.
iii) However, it may be apparent from that material, or from other available material, that the transaction is wider than that which is immediately apparent. If it does, then the whole of the wider transaction must be disclosed.
iv) When that has been done, further disclosure will be necessary if that is necessary in order to avoid unfairness or misunderstanding of what has been disclosed.
That chain is not articulated in terms in the authorities to which I am about to refer, but it seems to me that it is apparent from it.
"There was this contention raised, which I have not forgotten, that the defendant had waived his privilege, and therefore could not claim it at all. That, in my opinion, was entirely fallacious. He had done this, he had said 'Whether I am entitled to protect them or not I will produce certain of the documents for which I had previously claimed privilege – I will waive that and I will produce them' but that did not prevent him relying on such protection with regard to others which he did not like to produce. It is not like the case of a man who discloses part of a conversation and then claims protection for the remainder, and we think there is no ground for the contention that there has been here a waiver of privilege."
"While there is no rule that a party who waives privilege in relation to one communication is taken to waive privilege in relation to all, a party may not waive privilege in such a partial and selective manner that unfairness or misunderstanding may result."
"Sixth, by adducing evidence at a trial one does get involved in potential further waiver. The underlying principle is one of fairness in the conduct of the trial and does not go further than that. The fact that this principle does not arise unless you adduce the evidence at the trial is clearly stated in the judgment of Mustill J [in the Nea Karteria case] and it was clearly raised by the facts in the Doland case and it was likewise raised by the facts in the Great Atlantic and Burnell cases. Further, if the evidence is adduced, then the extent of the waiver relates to the transaction to which that evidence goes. The extent of the transaction has to be examined and where it is what somebody said on a particular occasion, then that is the transaction. It is not the subject matter of those conversations. It does not extend to all matters relating to the subject matter of those conversations."
Hobhouse J's principles, including that one, were cited with approval by the Court of Appeal in Tanap Investments (UK) Ltd v Tozer (unreported, 11th October 1991, Balcombe and Taylor LJJ). It is from his sixth principle that the need to identify the transaction is apparent. It is the first means of ascertaining what limits there are to the waiver that has been made.
"Furthermore, he applies what for convenience can be called a single transaction test. He looks to see what is the issue in relation to which the material has been deployed. He held that the issue was what was said at the meeting between the lawyer and the Greek seaman, and the correct evaluation of that meeting, but he did not accept that it extended to other matters which did not form part of the transaction…. Furthermore, it is central to Mustill J's judgment that you must define what is the subject matter with which you are concerned. He did not treat the subject matter as all the things about which the seaman spoke, but he merely treated as the subject matter what had been said on that occasion."
At page 114C, applying his principles to the facts of his case (which involved the disclosure of information about one conversation) he said:
"What will have happened is that the putting into evidence of that document will have opened up the confidentiality of that transaction. It has not opened up the confidentiality of later privileged communications….."
That process enables the parties and the court to identify how far the disclosing party has gone (it being that party's right to limit waiver if he wishes to do so).
"…classic judicial statement of principle…of Mustill J in Nea Karteria at 139:
'Where a party is deploying in court material which would otherwise be privileged, the opposite party and the court must have an opportunity of satisfying themselves that what the party has chosen to release from privilege represents the whole of the material relevant to the issue in question. To allow an individual item to be plucked out of context would be to risk injustice through its real weight or meaning being misunderstood.'
"The most obvious application of that principle is in relation to a single document, where a party waives privilege as to part of it but seeks to withhold the rest of it…... It also extends to attempted partial waiver of privilege in respect of certain of a number of documents relevant to the same issue or transaction. Of course, the scope for unfairness depends on the breadth of the matter in issue or their severability if more than one, and on the exact relationship and/or relevance to such issue(s) of the documents respectively disclosed and sought to be withheld. It may or may not be that partial disclosure of documents going to a matter or matters in issue, say in an exchange of correspondence with legal advisers, would be unfair.
"Much depends on whether the party making partial disclosure seeks to represent by so doing that the disclosed documents go to part or the whole of an 'issue in question', the expression used by Mustill J in the passage from his judgment in Nea Karteria that I have cited. The issue may be confined to what was said or done in a single transaction or it may be more complex than that and extend over a series of connected events or transactions. In each case the question for the court is whether the matters in issue and the document or documents in respect of which partial disclosure has been made are respectively severable so that the partially disclosed material clearly does not bear on matters in issue in respect of which material is withheld. The more confined the issue, for example as to the content of a single document or conversation, the more difficult it is likely to be to withhold, by severance, part of the document or other documents relevant to the document or conversation."
"It is not a case of partial disclosure in relation to his conduct throughout the period in issue, but one of clear severability over two periods within it and of the disclosed and undisclosed documents relating respectively to each period. If the Secretary of State keeps to Mr Richards' word, I can see no unfairness to the applicants…. If the Secretary of State does not seek to take an unfair advantage of his partial discovery at the trial, whether as a matter of evidence or argument, the applicants would be entitled to invite the trial judge to reopen the matter and determine whether there should be further disclosure."
Auld LJ did not at that point identify what the particular transaction was for these purposes, but it is to be inferred that it was one of two things. It was either the giving of advice on each relevant occasion, or, more likely, the giving of advice on the legal issue in question across the period in question, which presumably comprised several events. I say that the latter is more likely, because Auld LJ took the advice across the period as in effect one entity. One can only do that if one looks to some extent at the purpose of the disclosure, that is to say the reliance that would be placed on it in the proceedings. Since advice was only being relied on in order to support the government's case on its mental state for a certain period, that both defined and limited the transaction in question. However, if it were to transpire that use was to be made of the discovery outside that period and purpose, then it might transpire that that use would be unfair and that further matters would be opened up. Whether that is because the waiver would be taken to have been extended by virtue of the unfairness of limiting it, or whether it is because there is a separate principle of unfairness operating alongside or concurrently with the extent of the actual waiver, does not matter for these purposes. That is how the scheme seems to me to operate.
The application of those principles to this case
Conclusion