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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 >> RBS Rights Issue Litigation [2015] EWHC 3433 (Ch) (26 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3433.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3433 (Ch) |
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(HC-2013-000484 and others) |
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
AND CHIEF MASTER MARSH
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THE RBS RIGHTS ISSUE LITIGATION |
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Andrew Onslow QC, Adam Kramer and Scott Ralston (instructed by Stewarts Law LLP) for the SL Group of Claimants
Alex Barden and Max Schlote (instructed by Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP) for the QE Group of Claimants
David Railton QC, Sonia Tolaney QC, David Blayney QC, Adam Johnson and David Murray (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 5 – 7 October 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hildyard:
Scope of Judgment
(1) the SG Group, represented by Mr Jonathan Nash QC leading Mr Peter De Verneuil Smith and Mr Ian Higgins, who it was agreed between the Claimants should present their arguments against the admission of further expert evidence;
(2) the SL Group, represented by Mr Andrew Onslow QC, Mr Adam Kramer and Mr Scott Ralston, who it was agreed between the Claimants should present their arguments against an adjournment of the trial; and
(3) the QE Group, represented by Mr Alex Barden and Mr Max Schlote, who the Claimants agreed should present their arguments on other matters not addressed in this judgment.
Issue (1): whether to admit further expert evidence of an equity analyst
Test to be applied
"In my judgment the authorities which I have cited above establish the following propositions: expert evidence is admissible under section 3 of the Civil Evidence Act 1972 in any case where the Court accepts that there exists a recognised expertise governed by recognised standards and rules of conduct capable of influencing the Court's decision on any of the issues which it has to decide and the witness to be called satisfies the Court that he has a sufficient familiarity with and knowledge of the expertise in question to render his opinion potentially of value in resolving any of those issues."
(1) An expert is not to find facts but to express an expert opinion on the basis of assumed facts (JP Morgan v Springwell [2007] 1 All ER (Comm) 549; [2006] EWHC 2755 (Comm) §21).
(2) An expression of the opinion of what the expert would have done in the hypothetical situation is inadmissible (Midland Bank Trust Company Ltd v Hetts Stubbs & Kemp [1979] 1 Ch 384, 402).
"Expert evidence shall be restricted to what is reasonably required to resolve the proceedings."
"…whether the subject matter of the opinion is such that a person without instruction or experience in the area of knowledge or human experience would be able to form a sound judgment on the matter without the assistance of witnesses possessing special knowledge or experience in the area."
See R v Bonython (1984) 38 SASR 45 at 46, cited in JP Morgan Chase v Springwell at [20] and Barings at [38].
"I should mention one further practical matter, which I think is relevant to large commercial disputes. It is inevitable when there is a dispute between commercial entities that covers a long period of time (as this case does) and concerns a very large sum of money, that a huge amount of documents will have to be considered. There is a natural tendency of parties and their advisors to consider employing experts to assist in digesting this material, particularly if it relates to any area that might be recondite, such as trading in Russian debt in the 1990s. There is a tendency to think that a judge will be assisted by expert evidence in any area of fact that appears to be outside the 'normal' experience of a Commercial Court judge. The result is that, all too often, the judge is submerged in expert reports which are long, complicated and which stray far outside the particular issue that may be relevant to the case. Production of such expert reports is expensive, time-consuming and may ultimately be counter-productive. That is precisely why CPR Pt 35.1 exists. In my view it is the duty of parties, particularly those involved in large scale commercial litigation, to ensure that they adhere to both the letter and spirit of that rule. And it is the duty of the court, even if only for its own protection, to reject firmly all expert evidence that is not reasonably required to resolve the proceedings."
"(a) The first question is whether, looking at each issue, it is necessary for there to be expert evidence before that issue can be resolved. If it is necessary, rather than merely helpful, it seems to me that it must be admitted.
(b) If the evidence is not necessary, the second question is whether it would be of assistance to the court in resolving that issue. If it would be of assistance, but not necessary, then the court would be able to determine the issue without it (just as in Mitchell the court would have been able to resolve even the central issue without the expert evidence).
(c) Since, under the scenario in (b) above, the court will be able to resolve the issue without the evidence, the third question is whether, in the context of the proceedings as a whole, expert evidence on that issue is reasonably required to resolve the proceedings. In that case, the sort of questions I have identified in paragraph 63 above will fall to be taken into account. In addition, in the present case, there is the complication that a particular piece of expert evidence may go to more than one pleaded issue, or evidence necessary for one issue may need only slight expansion to cover another issue where it would be of assistance but not necessary.
Further, although CPR 35.1 does not refer to issues, but only to proceedings, if evidence is not reasonably required for resolving any particular issue, it is difficult to see how it could ever be reasonably required for resolving the proceedings. I therefore see a test directed at issues as a filter. That, at least, is an approach which can usefully be adopted."
"A judgment needs to be made in every case and, in making that judgment, it is relevant to consider whether, on the one hand, the evidence is necessary (in the sense that a decision cannot be made without it) or whether it is of very marginal relevance with the court being well able to decide the issue without it, in which case a balance has to be struck and the proportionality of its admission assessed. In striking that balance, the court should, in my judgment, be prepared to take into account disparate factors including the value of the claim, the effect of a judgment either way on the parties, who is to pay for the commissioning of the evidence on each side and the delay, if any, which the production of such evidence would entail (particularly delay which might result in the vacating of a trial date)."
Competing arguments as to the application of the test and guidelines
(1) First, what information had to be in the Prospectus in order for investors to make an informed assessment of the assets and liabilities, financial position, profits and losses, and prospects of RBS (within the meaning of s.87A FSMA)? (the "Necessary Information Question"). This is derived from s.87A FSMA.
(2) Second, would any "untrue" or "misleading" statement be sufficiently material to prevent an investor from making an informed assessment of the assets and liabilities, financial position, profits and losses, and prospects of RBS? (the "Materiality Question"). This is derived from the Defendants' latest materiality case, as pleaded in their draft Re-Amended Defence.
(3) Third, what did investors generally know at the time about matters which were omitted from the Prospectus? (the "Market Knowledge Question").
And in addition, on the Defendants' pleadings:
(4) Fourth, was the belief held by the Defendants as to truth of the statements in, and omissions properly omitted from, the Prospectus a reasonable one? (the "Reasonable Belief Question"). This is derived from the Schedule 10 FSMA defence.
"an equity analyst expert would be able to identify the information that would be regarded as necessary by an equity analyst for an informed assessment of a company's assets, liabilities, financial position, profits and losses and prospects."
"The argument [as to providing assistance in determining whether a judgement made was a fair judgement] would arise in connection with the Schedule 10 defence, where the bank and the directors would be saying "We reasonably believed that this was an appropriate course". But they are not assisted – the case in relation to that will depend on what they actually believed and what they did to verify that belief through the processes of putting together the prospectus, and the fact that they were able to say "Well, a banking analyst or indeed a bank analyst generally would have made the same mistake as us", doesn't have any bearing on the reasonable belief question".
"The evidence of a professional banking analyst… will be the evidence of an analyst and not an investor. And his approach, the professional banking analyst, is not the same as that of a non-professional investor."
(1) Whilst it might be possible to give evidence of the practice of equity/ investment analysts as at the time of the Rights Issue, that is not the investigation required by s.87A FSMA. The Court will be able to reach a conclusion based on submissions, and the evidence of the main experts (e.g. the capital or liquidity experts) who will be able to explain the importance of their respective subject areas to RBS's overall business.
(2) The question as to "necessary information" is a legal question – it does not require analysis of what some or even many investors in 2008 considered necessary. Rather the question is what is necessary for "an investor" as set out in s.87A FSMA, and that is an objective legal question for the Court to determine. It is comparable to the legal question in Barings Plc (No. 5) [1999] 1 BCLC 433 at 489-495 as to whether a director had been incompetent or not. In that case, Jonathan Parker J declined to admit the "expert" evidence of an individual who was highly experienced in the same field (managing an investment banking business) and whose opinion was that the director had not fallen below accepted practices in that field. It was simply not relevant to the statutory question of competence. This decision was upheld on appeal [2000] 1 BCLC 523, where Morritt LJ (as he then was) concluded at paragraph 39:
"The issue is not whether Mr Baker was an incompetent operator in the financial product or derivatives market. It is wrong to equate disqualification proceedings with a professional negligence claim. The standard of competence to be shown by a person as a director is a different question and is one of law. Whether the Respondent failed to achieve that standard is a question for the Court on which only exceptionally could the evidence of an expert be admissible."
"We say… to bring in the evidence runs the risk of obscuring the question by replacing "investor" with "investment professional"."
"And my Lord, just because the gamut will also include the unsophisticated is no reason at all to exclude evidence relating to the sophisticated. Or, my Lord, if I could put it another way, while your Lordship may well be able, unassisted, to conclude that an unsophisticated investor would have no need for certain information, without a detailed understanding of what a sophisticated investor does and how he approaches and performs his informed assessment, it would, we suggest, be extremely difficult, if not impossible, for your Lordship yourself to form a view as to that investor's need for a particular piece of information."
"My Lord, in order to form such a view your Lordship will need to understand what the relevance and significance of that piece of information would be to the informed assessment, including exactly what the person conducting the informed assessment might do with it in his quantitative or qualitative assessment of the company. My Lord, contrary to what the claimants suggest, this understanding, which we would say the court undoubtedly would need, will not come from the expert evidence that my Lord is going to hear on particular subject matters, such as regulatory capital, liquidity or risk. The evidence you get from those subjects, if I could call them those subject matter experts, will no doubt explain the relevant underlying concepts. They will no doubt tell my Lord what the relevant regimes were that were in place or in play at the relevant times, and possibly insofar as it is in dispute what RBS's actual underlying position was at the relevant times. But none of that would tell my Lord whether an investor would need that information for an informed assessment, still less would it tell you why or for what particular purpose, which, in our submission, would be the key reasoning for any such conclusion."
"provide objective material against which you can calibrate the different submissions as to reasonableness. And it is in our submission inevitable, it is inevitably the case that if an equity analyst would not regard certain information as necessary, such an opinion would reinforce our case as to the objective reasonableness of the defendants' judgment that that information was properly omitted."
My assessment of these arguments and adjudication
"…equity analysts seek to set their advice and recommendations apart from their peers based on (i) the depth and quality of their research; (ii) rigorous risk analysis; (iii) accuracy of their forecasts and recommendations; and (iv) market timing."
(1) the form of the previous Order made expressly clear that the disputed category of expert evidence would be subject to review;
(2) the fact that something is "inconvenient" for one party is not in itself determinative of, or even in this case (given the dislocation of the timetable already) an especially weighty consideration in, the final decision as to whether it should or should not be allowed;
(3) the adjournment I propose, with considerable reluctance (and not by reference to these issues) further attenuates any real "inconvenience".
Issue (2): the Defendants' application to postpone the trial date
(1) the disclosure exercise that the Defendants have been required to carry out has vastly exceeded all expectations in terms of scale and the amount of time and resource required;
(2) this has (according to the Defendants' skeleton argument and evidence) "had the effect…of preventing the Defendants from making significant progress with the preparation of witness evidence";
(3) that task has been further complicated and delayed by my own direction in July that the experts' reports should not be used as vehicles for proof of factual matters, leaving more to be covered in the witness statements; with the result that (again quoting that skeleton argument):
(4) "there is regrettably no realistic possibility of the Defendants being able to serve their witness statements by the present deadline of 20 November" and indeed that:
(5) "having given the matter careful consideration, the Defendants and their legal team believe that the earliest practicable date for witness statements is 15 April 2016";
(6) if the (previously agreed) intervals between the various pre-trial steps are maintained, that leads to a start date of 6 March 2017.
(1) The Defendants have adopted a process of disclosure which, though it has already taken many months, is now said, without any sufficient explanation, to require a re-review of every single one of the disclosed documents by the "Subject Specialists" and up to 119 Consilio and HSF Belfast "analysts".
(2) The Defendants have failed to explain what the analysis involves or why a re-review of their own documents is necessary, given that they have been in RBS's possession since the events which they concern and according to the Defendants' own evidence have all necessarily already been reviewed for the purposes of "disclosure decisions", and they have given no reason for believing that this process will identify significant documents, relevant to a witness's evidence, which the standard approach does not identify.
(3) In any event the "Disclosure Analysis" was an optional luxury. If the Defendants have failed to direct sufficient resources to such an exercise at an early enough stage to meet the date for exchange of witness statements, whether because they underestimated the scope of disclosure or otherwise, and/or have failed to have a sufficient tagging exercise done during the first review, that does not justify the extension sought and the jeopardy to the trial date.
(4) The Court is told that the Defendants have started proofing witnesses, but not when that started, how far the Defendants have got or what remains to be done. (For reasons already given, that is essential information to enable the Court to make a decision on the Application.)
(5) By her fifth witness statement, Ms Kirsten Massey of Herbert Smith Freehills LLP (putting aside for the present the "Disclosure Analysis" process) describes standard witness statement preparation: potential witnesses and the events and topics which the witness may cover are identified; relevant documents are identified by targeted searches of the database; and the witness is asked to give his/her account of the events (and so on) to which he/she can speak directly, assisted by the documents. In general, each witness needs to be shown only the documents he or she saw (or minutes of the meetings they attended, and so on). These should be very readily identifiable by searching, without some enormous review.
(6) This approach must surely enable the Defendants and their lawyers to identify "the most significant documents" (that being the alleged purpose of the "Disclosure Analysis"). It is not explained why it would not.
(7) The standard proofing process must be well advanced: in the ordinary course, first draft proofs will have been taken long ago and in order to plead the Defendants' case, and the Defendants could not simply assume that they would get an extension beyond November 2015. The contrary is not suggested.
(8) As to third party documents, the Claimants submit that it is quite unclear how this actually impedes the preparation and finalisation of witness statements for any of the 15-20 witnesses contemplated, still less for all or most of them. It is highly unlikely that RBS's witnesses saw or can speak to the third party documents anyway. In any event, the Court cannot form any useful view on that subject without being provided with much more specific information; and the renewed attempt to blame the Claimants for delay in receiving third party documents is to be rejected.
(9) It is true that there was provisional agreement that the experts would address a number of essentially factual issues, but that was not a substitute for the factual evidence (by way of documents and witness statements) that would underpin the expert evidence. It is implausible to imply that the date for exchange of witness statements was accepted by the Defendants in December 2014 on the basis that they would not have to address such matters as RBS's financial condition in their witness statements.
(10) More generally, and in all the circumstances, the Defendants had not discharged the heavy burden of demonstrating good reason for the adjournment of a trial fixed some time ago, especially given the inevitable prejudice to the Claimants in such delay. The grant of the Application would be unjust, and contrary to the overriding objective.
Applicable principles
(1) saving expense (CPR 1.1(2)(b));
(2) dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate to the complexity of the issues (CPR 1.1(2)(c)(iii));
(3) ensuring that the case is dealt with expeditiously and fairly (CPR 1.1(2)(d));
(4) allotting to the case an appropriate share of the Court's resources, while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases (CPR 1.1(2)(e)); and
(5) enforcing compliance with Court orders (CPR 1.1(2)(f)).
CPR 29 PD 7.4:
"(1) The court will not allow a failure to comply with directions to lead to the postponement of the trial unless the circumstances are exceptional.
(2) If it is practical to do so the court will exercise its powers in a manner that enables the case to come on for trial on the date or within the period previously set.
….
(6) Litigants and lawyers must be in no doubt that the court will regard the postponement of a trial as an order of last resort. Where it appears inevitable the court may exercise its power to require a party as well as his legal representative to attend court at the hearing where such an order is to be sought. …"
Chancery Guide 6.11:
"A trial date once fixed will, like a Trial Window, only rarely be altered or vacated."
Chancery Guide 7.39:
"As a timetable for the case will have been fixed at an early stage, applications for adjournment of a trial should only be necessary where there has been a change of circumstances not known when the timetable was fixed. Once a trial has been fixed it will rarely be adjourned."
Application of these principles and decision
(1) This is obviously a complex and large case in which the Defendants, as the repository of the vast majority of the relevant documents, bear the brunt of the difficult task of full and frank disclosure. I appreciate also that the Bank was and is a huge institution, comprised of numerous elements which may well be difficult to co-ordinate. I must take all that fully into account.
(2) I would accept that at the root of the problem that has developed and apparently swamped the Defendants and their advisers has been the enormous disclosure process (revealing, I am told, some 25 million documents, of which some 10 million are classed "unique"). I have no reason to think that the efforts made to collate this documentation have not been assiduous.
(3) However, and although the Claimants may have to share part of the blame in requiring what may have been an excessive number of custodians and search terms, and in not being more pro-active in securing third party disclosure, by far the larger part is, in my view, to be attributed to the Defendants. Something has gone wrong.
(4) I regret having to record my view that the Defendants' response to disclosure and in particular the identification of search terms and custodians appears not to have been informed by any sufficient early attempt to grasp what would truly be involved, and their approach to the process of disclosure has, as it seems to me, been diffuse.
(5) As it seems to me from the (itself somewhat diffuse) evidence available, that process has been determined and confused by the use of vast armies without any sufficient focus first, foremost and at all times by the principals in the Defendants, and the "senior members" having the conduct of the matter within the Defendants and within their solicitors on the sources and documents likely to be of real importance, and to constitute the real stuff of the case, both in assembling witness statements and through the trial process.
(6) Indicative of this, to my mind, was the delay and difficulty which seems to have been experienced by the Defendants' legal team in producing a satisfactory organogram to illustrate the committees and departments with primary responsibility for the production and verification of the Prospectus, and thereby also the most likely repositories of the most relevant documentation. This gave me the impression that as recently as August 2015, when this document was originally presented, the Defendants had not yet clarified the process by which the Prospectus was produced. It seems to me likely that had this been ascertained earlier, the Defendants could have undertaken a targeted approach to finding the core documents which will be needed for drafting witness statements, allowing them to start preparing such whilst simultaneously managing the ongoing disclosure exercise.
(7) There are also clear signs that the Bank has left the process of identification and collation of its documentation to its solicitors without itself being sufficiently involved in assisting that process, and in particular in explaining exactly how and by whom (and by what departments or committees) the Prospectus was built up and verified, and thus as to what the essential documentation comprises and its whereabouts.
(8) The results have been (a) what appears to be an unfocused disclosure process, which has fanned out exponentially and extravagantly without sufficient control and direction; (b) the commitment of increasing resource to the identification of documents, leaving a diminished resource for their assimilation, without properly taking stock as to whether the process had overtaken the purpose and/or whether a more confined process should be adopted, perhaps with the agreement of the Claimants or the blessing of the Court; and (c) the perceived need now for a process of disclosure analysis at this late stage by these "senior members" (and/or the so called "Subject Specialists" within the Defendants' legal team) far more extensive than should be necessary by this stage, and apparently disastrously disruptive of the process of compiling witness statements, which should have been started long ago and advanced simultaneously by reference to the really important documents which must already have been identified (not least for the purpose of the pleadings).
(9) In short, too much emphasis, it seems, has been placed by the Defendants on a "bottom up" approach to disclosure, without clear evidence that efforts have been made to apply a "top down" approach also, identifying key documents to be put to witnesses at the outset, which would have sped up the process overall.
(10) As previously indicated, I consider that the Defendants' evidence to explain all this and what, given the orders made, they could best do now, is less than wholly satisfactory: I agree with the Claimants that more detail should have been provided, especially as to the real need for the "Disclosure Analysis", and whether it might be streamlined, and as to what steps have been taken and what remain outstanding in respect of the compilation of witness statements, the identity of witnesses and the practical impossibility now asserted. Whilst I do not intend by any means to peer behind the curtain of legal privilege in this regard, the lack of clear evidence is all the more worrying given the apparently small percentage of their allotted budget for witness statements the Defendants' legal team have so far spent on this process, as was pointed out by Mr Onslow, and which does seem to raise questions as to exactly what (if anything substantial) has been done so far in this regard.
(11) Some of the evidence that has been provided by the Defendants has also been both unsettling and less than compelling: for example, the description by Ms Massey of the pleaded issues as "incredibly broad and complicated, in the sense that they range over large areas of the business of what was at that time a huge financial institution, and seek to call into question, in a general way, the manner in which the state of that business was reported to the market" provides no compelling reason for not having advanced further with the process of proofing witnesses more than two years after the action formally commenced and many more years after proceedings were threatened. Nor does it take into account the fact that the Bank has had to collate documents and evidence both for the purposes of regulatory investigations and in order to plead a Defence verified by a statement of truth.
(12) Even though I accept that, whatever the deficiencies or difficulties in the past, the question now is what time is required to ensure a fair and orderly pre-trial and trial process, Mr Onslow's submission on behalf of the Claimants to the effect that the Defendants must re-think their approach and strategy and must be able to achieve better progress in the future carries force. I am inclined to view sceptically the Defendants' gloomier predictions as to how long everything is likely to take.
(13) I accept also that there is prejudice to the Claimants in the very fact of further delay, including that costs rise inexorably with every day that passes before trial.
(14) I take into account also that the trial date has been fixed for some time, and moving it may dislocate other timetables. I have also considered the public interest in trials such as this not being perceived to be delayed unduly, and the incredulity inevitable in some quarters that a trial fixed for more than a year hence in respect of proceedings commenced years ago should have to be adjourned now on the basis that it is "impossible" to complete preparation for it.
(15) However, it is also my obligation to maintain a sense of perspective. A three-month delay in commencing the trial is not great in the context; and the timings I propose should not result in any substantial delay in the final determination of the matter.
(16) I have concluded that, despite my very great reluctance to do so, there is a sufficient risk of unfairness to the Defendants that I should grant a relatively short (and in all ordinary circumstances final) adjournment. I propose a revised start date of 6 March 2017, with time for earlier pre-reading in the preceding two weeks (which will necessitate the provision of skeleton arguments in good time before then).