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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Wyche v Careforce Group Plc [2013] EWHC 3282 (Comm) (25 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2013/3282.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3282 (Comm), [2014] 1 Costs LR 1 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IAN WYCHE |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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CAREFORCE GROUP PLC |
Defendant |
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MR THOMAS BRAITHWAITE (instructed by BPE) appeared on behalf of the defendant
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COURT COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE WALKER:
(1) If there has been a material breach of an "unless" order then that order will take effect in the ordinary course. If the party in breach wants to avoid that happening, then in the ordinary course there must be an application under CPR 3.9.
(2) The new sub-paragraph (1) of CPR 3.9 applies to this case. It is in these terms:
On an application for relief from any sanction imposed for a failure to comply with any rule, practice direction or court order, the court will consider all the circumstances of the case, so as to enable it to deal justly with the application, including the need –
(a) for litigation to be conducted efficiently and at proportionate cost; and
(b) to enforce compliance with rules, practice directions and orders.
(3) The background to the new rule 3.9(1) is described by Jackson LJ in Fred Perry (Holdings) Limited v. The Brands Trading Plaza Limited [2012] EWCA Civ 224. At paragraph 49 of his judgment Jackson LJ noted that:
There is a concern that relief against sanctions is being granted too readily at the present time. Such a culture of delay and non-compliance is injurious to the civil justice system and to litigants generally.
(4) At paragraph 50 of his judgment Jackson LJ warned that the result of the new Rule 3.9(1) would be that litigants who substantially disregard court orders or the requirements of the Civil Procedure Rules will receive significantly less indulgence than hitherto.
However, there is no reason to suppose that Henderson J was unaware of the seriousness of the sanction when he imposed it. The seriousness of the sanction is a matter that is to be taken into account in imposing the sanction in the first place. If there were any legitimate complaint about the seriousness of the sanction, the proper course would have been to appeal against Henderson J's order. That was not done. Moreover, in any event, the order of Henderson J was the second unless order made against the defendants, the first having been made by consent in August 2001. Third, this court has stressed on more than one occasion that compliance with court orders is a fundamental part of the interests of the administration of justice.
1. The claimant is a former shareholder of Eldercare (Cheshire) Limited ("the Company") the business of which was the provision of care services for the elderly and in particular on behalf of local government authorities. The only shareholders at the relevant time were the claimant and Helen Baker .
2. Pursuant to a Share Purchase Agreement dated 16.10.07 ("the Agreement") the defendant purchased the entire issued share capital of the Company. The initial consideration under the Agreement was £2.4 million which has been paid. The deferred consideration was £1.1 million and was payable in three tranches in respect of three six month periods of trading provided the EBITDA for the period was achieved by the Company: EBITDA of 261,020 for the period ending 16.4.08, £311,050 EBITDA for the period ending 16.10.08 and £399,450 EBITDA for the period ending 16.4.09.
3. The defendant was obliged under the Agreement to provide a statement and documentation in respect of each period of trading. In respect of the First Trading Period a statement was provided by the defendant asserting that the EBITDA target had not been achieved and therefore deferred consideration was not payable. The claimant contended it was not in accordance with the terms of the Agreement. The defendant provided further information and documentation which was analysed by the claimant's expert accountant.
4. The defendant supplied an email, rather than a statement, in respect of the Second Period of Trading outside of the time limits provided for by the Agreement. The email asserted that the EBITDA target had not been achieved for the Second Period of Trading and therefore deferred consideration for that period was not payable. The claimant asserted the email and such information as was provided was not in accordance with the terms of the Agreement. The defendant provided further information and documentation which was analysed by the claimant's expert accountant.
5. Following the provision of a report by the claimant's expert accountant the defendant accepted that EBITDA targets for the First and Second Period of Trading had been met and the defendant accepted that the deferred consideration was payable. Accordingly the defendant paid the total sum of £568,580 in respect of the deferred consideration for the first two periods together with interest thereon. The first payment of £239,125 was made on 11.5.09 and the second payment of £300,092 together with interest thereon of £29,363 was made on 4 April 2011.
6. Furthermore, on or around 14 December 2011and subsequent to the commencement of these proceedings the defendant agreed to pay the claimant a sum in respect of costs and expert accountancy fees namely £70,000 incurred by the claimant in ascertaining the true position for the first two trading periods.
7. In respect of the Third Period of Trading it is accepted by the claimant that the Company did not achieve the target EBITDA. However it is alleged by the claimant that the defendant has acted in breach of the warranties in Schedule 7 of the Agreement and in particular paragraphs 6.1 and/or 6.1.1 and/or 6.1.2 and/or 6.1.6. It is contended by the claimant that if these breaches had not occurred the EBITDA figure for the Third Trading Period would have been achieved and the sum of £560,783 would have been payable as the final tranche of the deferred consideration.
8. The defendant denies that it has acted in breach of any of the terms of the Agreement in respect of any of the three periods of trading. In particular the defendant denies that any breaches of the Agreements caused the Company not to achieve the EBITDA target for the Third Trading Period.
Procedural History
9. The procedural history of the matter to date, in brief, is as follows:
12.7.11 Claim Issued
18.7.11 Acknowledgment of Service
13.9.11 Extension of time for defence ordered by Beatson J
23.9.11 Defence
8.12.11 Reply
8.12.11 Request for further information of the defence
19.1.12 Defendant's replies to requests for further information
19.1.12 Defendant's requests for further information
16.2.12 Claimant's replies to requests for further information
unless the defendant complies with this paragraph it shall be debarred from defending.
The costs incurred with respect to any failure of the defendant to comply with its e-disclosure obligations are reserved to the trial judge.
10. At the time of the hearing, D [Careforce] was in the process of rebuilding the index to the archive, in the hope that this would resolve the various issues that had been identified. As it turned out, that hope was misplaced and the various time-line gaps have continued to dog the e-disclosure results.
11. Given the difficulties with e-disclosure that had arisen, D recognised that it would be best to engage outside consultants in order to comply with Burton J's order. Although D has an IT department who were competent to carry out the task, it was decided best to engage Kroll Ontrack given the existence of inexplicable timeline gaps and the repeated innuendo from C [Mr Wyche] that something untoward must have happened to the data.
12. Therefore, consequent to Burton J's order, Kroll Ontrack attended D's premises on 3 January 2013, took copies of all the relevant data sources, uploaded them to the Kroll system, and carried out the extensive keyword searches demanded by C.
13. It was at this point that human error crept in. In carrying out the keyword searches, the Kroll operative in question (Amy Bains) made three mistakes:
13.1. First, she used the OR operator instead of the AND operator for certain searches. This error, and its consequence, is explained [in Ms Bains's witness statement]. Self-evidently it resulted in too many documents, rather than too few.
13.2. Second, she misspelt the word "Cheshire" as "Chesire". However, this error was spotted at the time, and was therefore of no consequence. Indeed, it worked to D's favour because having noted that "Chesire" produced hits despite its misspelling, Ms Bains went ahead and used both terms as alternatives. This error is one of the matters (wrongly) raised by Mr McGinn in support of C's application, and is explained at [the second witness statements of Mr Wells] para. 6.
13.3. However, investigation of the "Chesire" error has exposed a further minor mistake made by Ms Bains. It seems that Ms Bains misread the schedule, and assumed that the search parameter "Documents including the word Cheshire and the word tender" … was a parameter to be applied in conjunction with the search parameters further up the page rather than independently. This error is explained at [the second witness statements of Mr Wells] para. 5-9.
14. The consequence of the AND/OR error is that rather than disclosing 65,000 odd documents, 177,339 documents were disclosed … . As explained in [the third witness statement of Mr Rowe] …, the error was noted by C on 10 April 2013. Kroll investigated the matter and D responded on 16 April 2013, identifying by means of an overlay the responsive and unresponsive documents. At the same time D enquired whether relief from sanction would be opposed. No response was received until 7 May, at which time C said it would oppose relief. D therefore applied the following day.
15. The Cheshire issue was not noted until after the application was issued. On 9 May, C wrote claiming that the error resulted from the misspelling of Cheshire. This is incorrect, and on investigation, Kroll have confirmed that the error was that described above. The consequence of the Cheshire error is that 24 documents were overlooked … . Those have now been disclosed.
16. D accepts that in both these respects, it did not comply with the court's order. Whether that non-compliance could be described as "material" is a moot point, but D requests relief from sanction in any event. The errors were innocent, quickly and easily resolved, committed by a third party and did not endanger the trial timetable. They are unlikely to have put C to any significant cost beyond noting the existence of the issue. Although D accepts that the errors must be seen against a backdrop of real difficulties with e-disclosure in this case, D took all proper steps to ensure compliance with Burton J's order, engaging well-regarded and competent professionals to carry out the task. That human error intervened is regrettable, but to debar D from defending the claim as a consequence would be a travesty of justice.
Importantly, given that the claimant, who had built up this business, was no longer involved in the running of it after the sale it is essential that disclosure is carried out properly by the defendant as to what happened in respect of the business. Without this the claimant cannot have a fair trial. The amount at stake in these proceedings is around £640,552. It may not be a significant sum to a large PLC such as the defendant but it is a lot of money to the claimant.
"Further analysis ... shows that there are 483 documents ... which contained the words "Cheshire" AND "Tender," but are marked as "non-responsive."
No explanation is given as to how that arises. It is a point which is taken only in oral argument today on the basis of a statement served yesterday. I am not prepared to accept that this would justify my making a finding of continuing breach in that regard.
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