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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 >> Financial Services Compensation Scheme Ltd. v Abbey National Treasury Services Plc [2007] EWHC 2868 (Ch) (04 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/2868.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 2868 (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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Financial Services Compensation Scheme Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Abbey National Treasury Services Plc |
Defendant |
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Charles Flint QC and Andrew George (instructed by Travers Smith) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 16 November 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice David Richards:
"10. The position in relation to the redacted questions and answers in FSCS's Checklists is as follows. The FSCS legal department is staffed by qualified lawyers. Questions 5, 6 and 7 all refer to documents that contain a distillation of legal advice and/or other documents that contain legal advice given by FSCS's General Counsel and other qualified lawyers within the legal department to the claims teams. Questions 6 and 7 identify the narrow question on which the legal department has advised. When read with their answers, questions 6 and 7 also reveal the substance of the legal advice given by FSCS's legal department; and even when read without their answers, questions 6 and 7 would, I believe, enable the substance of the legal advice given by FSCS's legal department to be inferred.
11. As for question 5, this question does not specifically identify the narrow question on which the legal department has advised, although it does give an indication of material considered by the legal department. Nevertheless, I believe that if unredacted, question 5 would enable both the nature of the advice given by the legal department, and the substance of that advice, to be inferred, and that this would be the case irrespective of whether the answer to question 5 is also unredacted.
12. Accordingly, I believe that FSCS is entitled to redact questions 5 to 7 on the Checklists, and their answers, on the grounds of legal advice privilege.
13. Ms Jay's challenge to the redaction of the narrative sections in the Checklists is entirely speculative. I have reviewed all of the redactions made to the narrative sections included in Ms Jay's exhibit and confirm that in each case the passages redacted evidence the substance of legal advice given by FSCS's legal department to the claims teams. Accordingly, I believe that FSCS is entitled to redact these passages on the grounds of legal advice privilege."
"We, therefore, conclude that the nineteenth century authorities established that legal advice privilege was a well-established category of legal professional privilege, but that such privilege could not be claimed for documents other than those passing between the client and his legal advisers and evidence of the contents of such communications."
This was reflected in the declaration of the Court of Appeal in that case that privilege encompassed:
"(1) Communications passing between the Bank and its legal advisers (including any solicitor seconded to the Bank) for the purposes of seeking or obtaining legal advice;
(2) Any part of a document which evidences the substance of such a communication."
The reference to "the purposes of seeking or obtaining legal advice" must now be read in the light of the decision of the House of Lords in Three Rivers DC v Bank of England (No.6) [2005] 1 AC 610.
"11. As for question 5, this question does not specifically identify the narrow question on which the legal department has advised, although it does give an indication of material considered by the legal department. Nevertheless, I believe that if unredacted, question 5 would enable both the nature of the advice given by the legal department, and the substance of that advice, to be inferred, and that this would be the case irrespective of whether the answer to question 5 is also unredacted."
Mr Railton QC for FSCS submitted that if the substance of the advice could be inferred from the redacted passage, it was a passage which "evidenced" the substance of the advice for the purposes of the test set out in Three Rivers DC v Bank of England (No.5) or "revealed" it (see The Good Luck). He relied on Thanki: The Law of Privilege at paras 2.54 – 2.57 and particularly:
"The most obvious of the categories of documents which are not, strictly speaking, actual communications are those documents which constitute secondary evidence of privileged communications."
Mr Railton submitted that a document from which the advice could be inferred constituted secondary evidence of the advice.
"[20] The second principle which is more directly tied to the protection of communications is that the privilege extends to any document prepared by a lawyer or client from which there might be inferred the nature of the advice sought or given. Examples include communications between the various legal advisers of the client, draft pleadings, draft correspondence with the client or the other party, and bills of costs: Propend Finance, at CLR 569; ALR 597-8."
I do not consider that this provides a basis generally for a claim for privilege in any document from which legal advice may be inferred. Its restricted application is apparent from the examples given.