![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Chedington Events Ltd v Brake & Anor [2022] EWHC 2880 (Ch) (15 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/2880.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2880 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
166 and 167 of 2015, and 21 of 2019 |
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BRISTOL
PROPERTY TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD
2 Redcliff Street, Bristol, BS1 6GR |
||
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
In the Possession Proceedings CHEDINGTON EVENTS LIMITED (formerly AXNOLLER EVENTS LIMITED) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) NIHAL MOHAMMED KAMAL BRAKE (2) ANDREW YOUNG BRAKE |
Defendants |
|
In the Eviction Proceedings |
||
(1) NIHAL MOHAMMED KAMAL BRAKE (2) ANDREW YOUNG BRAKE (3) TOM CONYERS D'ARCY |
Claimants |
|
and |
||
THE CHEDINGTON COURT ESTATE LIMITED |
Defendant |
|
In the Documents Proceedings |
||
(1) NIHAL MOHAMMED KAMAL BRAKE (2) ANDREW YOUNG BRAKE |
Claimants |
|
-and- |
||
(1) GEOFFREY WILLIAM GUY (2) THE CHEDINGTON COURT ESTATE LIMITED (3) CHEDINGTON EVENTS LIMITED (formerly AXNOLLER EVENTS LIMITED) |
Defendants |
|
In the Insolvency Application |
||
(1) NIHAL MOHAMMED KAMAL BRAKE (2) ANDREW YOUNG BRAKE (as trustees of the Brake Family Settlement) AND OTHERS |
Applicants/Respondents |
|
and |
||
(1) SIMON LOWES (2) RICHARD TOONE (as joint liquidators of the Stay in Style Partnership (in liquidation)) (3) DUNCAN KENRIC SWIFT (as former trustee in bankruptcy of Nihal Brake and Andrew Brake) (4) THE CHEDINGTON COURT ESTATE LIMITED |
Respondents/Applicants |
____________________
Mrs Nihal Brake for herself and Mr Andrew Brake
Application dealt with on paper
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Paul Matthews :
Introduction
"The Guy Parties will not without the permission of the Court use any information obtained as a result of this Order for the purpose of any civil or criminal proceedings, either in England and Wales or in any other jurisdiction, other than in the Possession and the Eviction Proceedings."
Background
The parties' submissions
"is relevant to a key issue in the application which is whether Mrs Brake is suffering from a mental disorder of a serious nature for which mental health crisis treatment is required. It will be relevant for the Court (and any experts should permission for such evidence been given in the Moratorium Application) to consider what professional work Mrs Brake is undertaking in circumstances where she purports to be suffering from a mental disorder of a serious nature for which mental health crisis treatment is required".
"obviously relevant to the question of whether (or to what extent) Mrs Brake is suffering from a mental health crisis, and therefore unable to engage with debt advice, which is one of the bases upon which the Moratorium Application is advanced".
They further say it is not only probative in itself, but also material for cross examination of relevant medical experts (if any give evidence). They also say that any argument about Mrs Brake's mental health based on evidence that she is working must be had at the final hearing, and not shut out at this stage by preventing collateral use of the bank statement.
"to regularise the position across all four sets of proceedings".
The law
"it is not for [the respondent to the application for permission] to advance reasons why the implied undertaking should not be released but rather for the [applicants for such permission] to demonstrate cogent and persuasive reasons why it should be released."
"I do not, for my part, think that it would be helpful to review these authorities for they are no more than examples and they illustrate no general principle beyond this, that the court will not release or modify the implied undertaking given on discovery save in special circumstances and where the release or modification will not occasion injustice to the person giving discovery. As Nourse LJ observed in the course of his judgment in the instant case (ante, p.840G), each case must turn on its own individual facts. In the instant case, the determinative point to my mind is that it is purely adventitious that there happened to be two actions."
"66. The general principles which emerge are clear:
i) The collateral purpose rule now contained in CPR 31.22 exists for sound and long established policy reasons. The court will only grant permission under rule 31.22 (1) (b) if there are special circumstances which constitute a cogent reason for permitting collateral use.
ii) The collateral purpose rule contained in section 9 (2) of the 2003 Act is an absolute prohibition. Parliament has thereby signified the high degree of importance which it attaches to maintaining the co-operation of foreign states in the investigation of offences with an overseas dimension.
iii) There is a strong public interest in facilitating the just resolution of civil litigation. Whether that public interest warrants releasing a party from the collateral purpose rule depends upon the particular circumstances of the case. Those circumstances require careful examination. There are decisions going both ways in the authorities cited above.
iv) There is a strong public interest in preserving the integrity of criminal investigations and protecting those who provide information to prosecuting authorities from any wider dissemination of that information, other than in the resultant prosecution.
v) It is for the first instance judge to weigh up the conflicting public interests. The Court of Appeal will only intervene if the judge erred in law (as in Gohil) or failed to take proper account of the conflicting interests in play (as in IG Index)."
"26. … the substantial importance attached to the prohibition against collateral use, and the public interest in its observance. The rules, in other words, may be procedural in form: but they give effect to important public policy, and in exercising its discretion to give permission for collateral use, the Court must be circumspect and protective of that policy.
"33. In my view, the burden is such that, in reality, it will usually be difficult, if not impossible, to obtain permission for collateral use (especially in the case of witness statements) except where the Court is persuaded of some public interest in favour of, or even apparently mandating, such use which is stronger than the public interest and policy underlying the restrictions that the rules reflect.
34. The most common public policy interest relied on as overriding the public interest in preserving confidentiality and privacy expressed by the rules is the public interest in the investigation and/or prosecution of serious fraud or criminal offences."
"53. The message of the cases, echoing down from Crest Homes and even before then, is that the discretion is to be exercised by reference to all the circumstances as they appear to the court whose permission is sought, and on the basis that it is for the applicant to show that the public interest in making the documents available outweighs the public interest in honouring the promise of privacy which the rules reflect. Careful observance of the restrictions against collateral use, and circumspection accordingly in permitting any departure from them, is important in encouraging compliance with fundamental obligations in contested English proceedings of full and proper disclosure (including of confidential material, save in exceptional circumstances) and the exchange of witness statements which to a greater or lesser extent provide a glimpse behind the curtain into the other side's brief."
"92. … it appears from the evidence that the US Subpoena has received no material judicial input; and there has simply not been demonstrated any sufficient necessity or urgency to outweigh this jurisdiction's public policy and interest which the restrictions against collateral use are intended to promote, nor even any clear compulsion on the parties before this court to even the balance."
"25. I apply the general principles identified by Jackson LJ in his judgment in Tchenguiz [v Serious Fraud Office [2014] EWCA Civ 1409, [66]]. I accept that the collateral purpose rule exists for sound and long-established policy reasons. I accept that the court will only grant permission if there are special circumstances which constitute a cogent reason for permitting collateral use, and that whether the public interest warrants releasing a party from the collateral purpose rule depends upon the particular circumstances of the case and those circumstances require careful examination."
"26. … it seems to me that the fact that a single set of proceedings could have been brought does not affect the question of whether this court should grant permission for collateral use."
As I read her decision, therefore, for the purposes of deciding whether to give permission for collateral use of the documents, the judge was putting on one side the fact that the two sets of proceedings were closely related, and could have been consolidated. This may be contrasted with the view taken by Lord Oliver in Crest Homes, that in that case "the determinative point to my mind is that it is purely adventitious that there happened to be two actions".
"32. … The proceedings in issue are not just related, but unusually, the evidence in the two proceedings goes to one central narrative, the sale of the shares, which happened in the same period for both proceedings. The overlap or potential overlap and relevance of the evidence could not be clearer or closer."
"a cogent reason for permitting the collateral use of the witness statements and the other documents".
She also said that
"no clear reasons have been advanced as to any prejudice which will result, other than a general desire to have avoid having details of the negotiations on this deal in the public domain".
Discussion
Disclosure and freezing orders
Generally
"the court will not release or modify the implied undertaking given on discovery save in special circumstances and where the release or modification will not occasion injustice to the person giving discovery,"
and it is for
"the [applicants for such permission] to demonstrate cogent and persuasive reasons why it should be released".
Moreover,
"each case must turn on its own individual facts".
It is therefore a fact-sensitive enquiry. Of course, none of these judicial statements is to be construed as if they were in a statute: see for example Sullivan v Bury Street Capital Ltd [2021] EWCA Civ 1694, [75].
"34. The most common public policy interest relied on as overriding the public interest in preserving confidentiality and privacy expressed by the rules is the public interest in the investigation and/or prosecution of serious fraud or criminal offences."
To that I would only add that, for myself, I would include in "criminal offences" the investigation and prosecution of contempts of court occasioned by breaches of court orders even in civil cases. Many of the cases where permission has been given are indeed of this kind, as, indeed, was Crest Homes itself.
Factors
Use
"60. On the basis of these authorities it seems that:
i) Absent some provision in the relevant order, doing anything other than realising, in the course of review for the purposes of the proceedings in which documents are disclosed, that a document or documents would be relevant to other proceedings actual or contemplated, may constitute a collateral use.
ii) The best course is therefore to seek permission for collateral use to review as soon as the issue is identified.
iii) It would then be necessary to apply for permission for collateral use to deploy the documents if a (permitted) review concluded that it was desirable to use them."
Conclusion