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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Idara v London Borough of Southwark [2024] EWHC 3556 (KB) (08 November 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2024/3556.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 3556 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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PATIENCE IDARA | Appellant | |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF SOUTHWARK | Respondent |
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Lower Ground, 46 Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1JE
Web: www.epiqglobal.com/en-gb/ Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MS C ROWLANDS appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Peter Lane :
"(2A) The court may give permission for an appeal to be brought after the end of the period allowed by subsection (2) but only if it is satisfied:
(a) where permission is sought before the end of that period, that there is a good reason for the applicant to be unable to bring the appeal in time; or
(b) where permission is sought after that time, that there was a good reason for the applicant's failure to bring the appeal in time and for any delay in applying for permission."
"I have also seen a witness statement from Ms Charlotte Wood, a paralegal at Law Stop Solicitors who now acts for Ms Idara. She explains that Ms Idara became a client of Law Stop Solicitors on 20 April 2023. Ms Wood says that she took immediate conduct of the case.
[14] After taking instructions from Ms Idara, it became apparent that the timeframe for bringing a section 204 appeal within the statutory time limit had passed. After discussing the limitation period for an appeal with her client Ms Wood immediately made inquiries as to available counsel. Counsel was then briefed and asked to provide advice as soon as possible. Counsel provided advice on 21 April 2023.
[15] From 21 April 2023 to 3 May 2023 Ms Wood was on a period of leave and away from the office. A colleague was asked to look after her cases whilst she was away. When she returned after her leave, the next steps in the case had not been actioned as requested by counsel who had advised that they should be done immediately.
[16] On 3 May 2023 as soon as she realised the appeal had not been issued Ms Wood prepared the appeal that morning and it was filed with the court around midday. The appellant's notice is stamped as having been filed on 4 May but I accept that it may not have been processed, i.e. stamped until the day after it was filed.
[17] Ms Wood states that her firm have looked into why action was not actioned sooner. The person with conduct of the file in her absence explained that they received the grounds but did not know what to do. They now understand that they should have contacted a supervisor but they did not and instead waited for Ms Wood to return from leave. Ms Wood accepts that in the circumstances the further delay was the fault of the solicitors Law Stop and not Ms Idara."
"[31] The appropriateness of applying the Mitchell/Denton principles to the statutory test in section 204(2A) is underlined by the fact that under those principles the question of good reason is only one factor, and not necessarily a determinative factor, in the assessment to be made. The Mitchell/Denton approach, as set out in Hysaj at [38] is this: "A judge should address an application for relief from sanctions in three stages. The first stage is to identify and assess the seriousness and significance of the "failure to comply with any rule, practice direction or court order" which engages Rule 3.9(1). If the breach is neither serious nor significant, the court is unlikely to need to spend much time on the second and third stages. The second stage is to consider why the default occurred. The third stage is to evaluate "all the circumstances of the case, so as to enable the court to deal justly with the application.""
It is at the second stage that the question of good reason arises. A strict approach towards the question of good reason can more readily be justified in a situation where the potential for unjust consequences can be mitigated at the third stage, where the court evaluates all the circumstances. By contrast, there is no scope for a three-stage analysis under section 204(2A), where consideration of the merits and any other matters can arise only if good reason is established. To restrict, by reference to the Mitchell/Denton approach, the circumstances that can be taken into account in the assessment of good reason under section 204(2A) would therefore open the door to unjust outcomes, which Parliament cannot have intended.
[32] That different approaches may be taken in different contexts is illustrated by Green v Mears Ltd [2018] EWCA Civ 751, in which it was held that the even stricter approach previously applied to applications for an extension of time for appealing to the Employment Appeal Tribunal was not to be treated as superseded by the Mitchell/Denton principles. As Underhill LJ said at [40], "how strict an approach should be taken to non-compliance with time limits is not a question to which one answer is necessarily better or worse than another. A balance has to be struck between two interests which weigh on opposite sides. Different courts or tribunals may legitimately choose to strike the balance differently." In this case the point is an even stronger one, in that the test of good reason in section 204(2A) has been laid down by Parliament and it is not open to the courts to strike a different balance by reading limitations into that test.
[33] The same point may be made about Barton v Wright Hassall LLP [2018] UKSC 12, which concerned an application by the claimant, a litigant in person, for an order under CPR 6.15 validating service of the claim form retrospectively. Lord Sumption stated at [18] that a lack of representation will not usually justify applying to litigants in person a lower standard of compliance with rules or orders of the court. He pointed to the "disciplinary factor" in the cases on relief from sanctions, a factor which was less significant in the case of applications to validate defective service of a claim form. He continued:
"There are, however, good reasons for applying the same policy to applications under CPR 6.15(2) simply as a matter of basic fairness. The rules provide a framework within which to balance the interests of both sides. That balance is inevitably disturbed if an unrepresented litigant is entitled to greater indulgence in complying with them than his represented opponent. Unless the rules and practice directions are particularly inaccessible or obscure, it is reasonable to expect a litigant in person to familiarise himself with the rules which apply to any step which he is about to take." Again, the reasoning relates to the balance to be struck by the courts in relation to compliance with rules of court. It cannot be read across to the context of section 204(2A) so as to alter the content of effect of the test laid down by Parliament."
"[35] In no way does that view give carte blanche to delay. The basis cruel remains the 21 day limit, with which Parliament mist have intended applicants in general to comply. Compliance may present little difficulty in practice if an applicant already has a solicitor acting for him in relation to the review (as might have been the position in Mr Al Almed's case had it not been for a breakdown in the relationship between him and his solicitor). Where an applicant relies on the fact that he was unrepresented and was seeking legal aid as a reason for non-compliance, the circumstances will need to be examined with care, including scrutiny of the diligence with which he acted in seeking legal aid. And even if the court is satisfied as to good reason, that simply opens up a discretion to give permission for an appeal to be brought out of time. At that stage the court is able to take into account all other relevant considerations, including the position of the local authority, in deciding how to exercise its discretion."
"But is there a good reason for the applicable delays? There are two parts to section 204(2A)(b). It is agreed that in asking whether I am satisfied that there was a good reason for the applicant's failure to bring the appeal in time, the question I should ask is whether there is a good reason for the applicant's failure to bring the appeal within 21 days, not whether there is a good reason for the applicant not bringing the appeal until 3 May 2023.
[25] I accept the evidence of Ms Idara. I am satisfied that she had a good reason for wanting the solicitors to assist her in bringing the appeal and would have found it extremely challenging to do so without them. Moreover, little practical purpose would have been served by her filing a holding appeal because the court could not do anything with it until such time as fully particularised grounds of appeal were filed. As set out above, Ms Idara has explained the steps she took to find a solicitor. Moreover, although she had an imperfect understanding of what she needed to do, she did notify the respondent before the expiry of the 21 days that she wanted to challenge the decision.
[26] Therefore I am satisfied that she had a good reason for not filing an appellant's notice as a litigant in person but instructing solicitors to do that. In addition, I am satisfied that she took reasonable steps to find solicitors, albeit she was not successful until after the expiry of the 21-day period.
[27] The reason therefore that Ms Idara failed to bring the appeal in time was that she was unable to find a solicitor in time. Had she found a solicitor, the appeal would have been brought in time. I can say that with confidence because the paralegal with conduct of the case would not by that stage have gone on holiday. The first limb of subsection 2(A)(b) is satisfied.
[28] However, I must also be satisfied that there was a good reason for any delay in applying for permission. In my judgment, this does not mean simply that I must be satisfied that there was a good reason for a delay, it means that I must be satisfied that there was a good reason for the period of delay as a whole.
[29] For example, suppose that there was a good reason for a delay of 10 days. If the total period of delay was 10.5 days then the court might well conclude that taken as a whole, there was a good reason for the period of delay, even though there was not a good reason for every single bit of it. If the total period of delay was 2 years, the court might well conclude that taken as a whole there was not a good reason for the period of delay even though there was a good reason for a small part of it. This construction of the statute strikes me as practical and fair and I am satisfied that it gives effect to the legislative intent.
[30] In this particular case, I must be satisfied that there was a good reason why the application for permission was not brought until 3 May 2023.
[31] The difficulty for the applicant is the delay by her solicitors. I accept that Ms Idara had done everything that she could reasonably have been expected of her, that could reasonably have been expected of her and I accept that Ms Wood acted promptly both before and after going on leave and that steps were taken to deal with the conduct of her cases in her absence.
[32] However, in my judgment there was not a good reason why this case was not dealt with in her absence. The person with temporary conduct of it, as acknowledged, should have contacted their supervisor if they did not know what to do and really the appellant's notice should have been filed promptly after the solicitors were instructed.
[33] In those circumstances, I am not satisfied that there was a good reason for the period of delay as a whole. The larger part of that delay was the period for which there was no good reason where the delay was due to the administrative shortcomings of the solicitors. As there was not a good reason for any delay, the opportunity for me to exercise a discretion does not arise. It is with regret therefore that the application for permission for an appeal to be brought after the end of the 21-day period is dismissed."
DISCUSSION
"The evidence was that matters moved very swiftly once Tyrer Roxburgh became involved. A legal advisor saw Mr Al Ahmed on 23 May, counsel was instructed and an appellant's notice containing an application for leave to appeal out of time and grounds of appeal [were] lodged on 25 May."
"HHJ Harris QC considered the evidence of the applicant in detail and concluded that he was not satisfied that there was a good reason for her failure to bring the appeal in time, nor for any delay in applying for permission afterwards."
"Held that there was no good reason for the applicant's delay in making her application for permission because she had failed to explain why she had not obtained an appointment with the solicitors who had said that they could see her within four to five weeks of the review decision."
"It would be inappropriate for this court to form its own view as to whether Ms Barratt has shown a good reason for not starting proceedings before 6 March and for not making it earlier than she did after 6 March."