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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Northern Rock (Asset Management) Plc v Chancellors Associates Ltd [2011] EWHC 3229 (TCC) (09 December 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2011/3229.html Cite as: [2012] TCLR 1, [2011] EWHC 3229 (TCC), [2012] BLR 303, [2012] Bus LR D81, [2012] 2 All ER 501 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
NORTHERN ROCK (ASSET MANAGEMENT)PLC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CHANCELLORS ASSOCIATES LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Luke Wygas (instructed by the Defendant) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 11 and 16 November 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
The Facts of This Case
"As this is a claim for an unspecified amount, we would be grateful if judgment could be entered for the Claimant with damages to be assessed".
The Request for Judgment was in Form N225 which is intended for specified or liquidated sums being claimed. The Claimant's solicitors ticked the pro-forma statement in it: "The Defendant admits that all the money is owed" but added in handwriting: "Please enter judgment for damages to be assessed". This letter and Request were only put before the Court after argument had been concluded.
The CPR
"(1) Where any party makes an admission under rule 14.1(2)… any other party may apply for judgement on the admission.
(2) Judgment shall be such judgement as it appears to the court that the applicant is entitled to on the admission."
The notice to the 2011 Civil Procedure state at Para 14.3.6:
"Unless the defendant consents to judgement being entered (in which case a consent judgement can be obtained in accordance with r. 40.6) the claimant will have to make an application to the court. See, generally, Pt 23"
Discussion
"43. It does not, however, follow that under the CPR the defendant is entitled to have the judgment set aside as of right, ex debito justitiae, or indeed that, if there is a discretion it can be exercised in only one way. It was pressed upon us that such an extreme approach is inconsistent with the overriding objective of dealing with cases justly and that, on an application to set aside a judgment, (albeit irregularly obtained) a claimant might be able to demonstrate that there would be no point in setting aside the judgment and requiring the claimant to issue and serve new proceedings. Take, for instance, a case in which the claim form is served at the wrong address by mistake and in which the claimant cannot satisfy the strict criteria for extending the time for service (see CPR 7.6). If no question of limitation of action arises and there is no other benefit to the defendant in requiring the claimant to start fresh proceedings, it is contrary to the overriding objective that he should be required to do so to no good purpose at all. If he can show that there is no real prospect of his claim failing he should be able to obtain (or retain) his judgment in the current action.
44. The question is whether the CPR permits such an approach. In our judgment, there are procedural ways in which to achieve that result. It was suggested in argument that there are a number of provisions of the CPR which (in combination) could be deployed to achieve it. They are rules 6.9, 3.1(2)(m), 3.1(7) and 3.10…
46. Rule 3.1(2) sets out a list of powers which are additional to other powers in the rules or practice directions. It provides that the court has the powers in the list "except where these Rules provide otherwise" and, after setting out a list of specific powers, provides that the court may:
"(m) take any other step or make any other order for the purpose of managing the case and furthering the overriding objective".
Rule 3.1(7) provides:
"(7) A power of the court under these Rules to make an order includes a power to vary or revoke the order."
Rule 3.10 (to which we referred earlier) provides:
"Where there has been a error of procedure such as a failure to comply with a rule or a practice direction –
(a) the error does not invalidate any step taken in the proceedings unless the court so orders; and
(b) the court may make an order to remedy the error."
47. It is said that rule 3.1(7) does not apply because "order" in the paragraph cannot include a judgment, that rule 3.10 does not apply because purported service at an address not permitted by the rules is not an "error of procedure" within the meaning of the rule and that rule 3.1(2)(m) is not apt to remedy the position. We accept that, if an application to set aside an irregular judgment were governed by rule 39.3(3) none of these rules would be relevant. Rule 3.1(2)(m) would not apply because it only applies "except where these Rules provide otherwise". Rule 3.10 would not apply for the reasons given in Vinos v Marks & Spencer plc, namely that the general words of rule 3.10 could not extend to enable a court to do what another rule expressly forbade. The same principle would in our judgment apply to rule 3.1(7).
48. However, once it is held (as we have done) that rule 39.3(5) does not apply to an application to set aside an irregular judgment, those principles do not apply to exclude the application of those three rules. While it is perhaps possible that there is no rule of the CPR which governs an application to set aside such a judgment and that the court's power to do so stems from some more general power to set aside a judgment ex debito justitiae, it seems unlikely that such a comprehensive code does not cover such a situation. We would hold that the attempted service at the wrong address was an "error of procedure" within the meaning of rule 3.10. The court is therefore empowered to make an order to remedy the error, and if rule 3.10 (b) was not thought strong enough to give the court power to make an order to the effect that an irregular judgment should be set aside, the necessary power is available under rule 3.1(2)(m). We do not consider it necessary to consider the vexed question whether the word "order" is wide enough to include "judgment" in rule 3.1(7): for the problems created by the distinctions between "judgments" and "orders" in the CPR see volume 1 of the White Book 2006 at paragraph 40.1.1.
49. On such an application, in construing the CPR, it is not in our judgment appropriate to hold, on the true construction of the wide and unfettered discretion given by those two rules, that the discretion to set aside an irregular judgment can only be exercised in one way, namely by setting aside the judgment. There may be circumstances in which the overriding objective of dealing with cases justly, which of course expressly includes, by rule 1.1(2), saving expense and dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate, requires the discretion to be exercised differently.
50. That is not to say that on an application to set aside a judgment in a case of this kind the just order will not almost always be to set aside the judgment. In a case where the proceedings have not been served on the defendant and service has not been dispensed with before judgment, a court could only properly refuse to set aside a judgment where there is no prejudice to the defendant (or, possibly, to some innocent third party who has acted to his detriment in the belief that the judgment was regularly entered)... However, each case depends upon its own facts and there may be circumstances in which it will not be appropriate to set aside the judgment, or at any rate, the whole judgment, as for instance when the defendant has delayed inexcusably in making his application to the court after learning that the judgment had been entered against him."
Conclusion