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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 >> Peel Port Shareholder Finance Company Ltd v Dornoch Ltd [2017] EWHC 876 (TCC) (26 April 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2017/876.html Cite as: [2017] 1 CLC 860, [2017] BLR 382, [2017] Lloyd's Rep IR 374, [2017] EWHC 876 (TCC), [2017] 2 All ER (Comm) 1024, [2017] WLR(D) 290, [2017] Bus LR 1663 |
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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 :
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Peel Port Shareholder Finance Company Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Dornoch Limited |
Defendant |
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Mr James Medd (instructed by Kennedys) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 24th March 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE JEFFORD:
Background
The application
"(1) This rule applies where an application is made to the court under any Act for disclosure before proceedings have started.…
(3) The court may make an order under this rule only where –
(a) the respondent is likely to be a party to subsequent proceedings;(b) the applicant is also likely to be a party to those proceedings;(c) if proceedings had started the respondent's duty by way of standard disclosure, set out in rule 31.6, would extend to the documents or classes of documents of which the applicant seeks disclosure; and(d) disclosure before proceedings have started is desirable in order to –(i) dispose fairly of the anticipated proceedings;(ii) assist the dispute to be resolved without proceedings; or(iii) save costs."
Discretion
"In my judgment, for jurisdictional purposes the court is only permitted to consider the granting of pre-action disclosure where there is a real prospect in principle of such an order being fair to the parties if litigation is commenced, or of assisting the parties to avoid litigation, or of saving costs in any event. If there is such a real prospect, then the court should go on to consider the question of discretion, which has to be considered on all the facts and not merely in principle but in detail."
The Third Parties (Rights against Insurers) Act 2010
"(1) If a person (A) reasonably believes that –
(a) another person (B) has incurred a liability to A, and
(b) B is a relevant person
A may, by notice in writing, request from B such information falling within sub-paragraph (3) as the notice specifies.
(2) If a person (A) reasonably believes that –
(a) a liability has been incurred to A,
(b) the person who incurred the liability is insured against it under a contract of insurance
(c) rights of that person under the contract have been transferred to A under section 1, and
(d) there is a person (C) who is able to provide information falling within sub-paragraph (3)
A may, by notice in writing, request from C such information falling within that sub-paragraph as the notice specifies.
(3) The following is the information that falls within this sub-paragraph –
(a) whether there is a contract of insurance that covers the supposed liability or might reasonably be regarded as covering it;
(b) if there is such a contract –
(i) who the insurer is;
(ii) what the terms of the contract are;
………………"
"Under the 1930 Act the third party is unable to overcome deficiencies in the statutory regime by obtaining disclosure orders under rules of court. Notwithstanding the changes we propose to the statutory transfer of rights, in our view, before he issues proceedings, the third party will still be able to obtain little (if any) information about the insured's insurance position under the CPR. We note, in particular:(1) Orders for pre-action disclosure will only be granted against prospective litigants. They would not, for example, be available against insurance brokers.(2) Such orders will only be granted in respect of specified documents. A third party who is completely ignorant of the insured's insurance potion may find it difficult to specify documents.(3) Such orders will only be granted if early disclosure is desirable in order to dispose of the further proceedings fairly, avoid future proceedings or save costs."
"The specific disclosure regime we are recommending places the third party who receives a transfer of rights under the draft Bill in a better position than the third party faced with a solvent insured. In particular, it enables him to obtain information before issuing proceedings. By contrast, a third party faces with a solvent insured would in the usual case receive nothing that was not volunteered."
The Applicant's argument
"Rights to information, or to inspection of documents, that a person has by virtue of paragraph 1 or 3 are in addition to any such rights as the person has apart from that paragraph."
The Explanatory Notes expressly give as an example of such rights, rights under the Civil Procedure Rules. The Explanatory Notes are expressly not part of the Act and have not been endorsed by Parliament and are not, therefore, an aid to construction. In any case, whether or not paragraph (6) is intended to refer to CPR Rule 31.16, that rule does not confer any right to disclosure until the Court has in its discretion ordered such disclosure. Paragraph (6) seems to me more apt to refer to, for example, a contractual right to documentation/ information or to an entitlement to disclosure in proceedings against the insured (if not stayed) of the type with which paragraph (3) is concerned. In my judgment, however, Mr Shapiro does not have to rely on this paragraph for his argument that there are, in principle, two statutory regimes which may potentially be applicable.
(i) The provisions of Schedule 1 demonstrate that Parliament cannot have envisaged that CPR Rule 31.16 would or would commonly be used to obtain insurance policies from the insurers of insolvent insureds.(ii) There has never been an express statutory provision entitling a litigant to obtain the insurance policy of a solvent insured (because a litigant takes his defendant as he finds him).
(iii) In proceedings against the insured Rule 31.16 does not provide a route for a prospective litigant to obtain the insurance policy of a solvent insured because the policy does not meet the test for standard disclosure.
(iv) Attempts to deploy other provisions of the CPR to obtain the insurance policy of a solvent insured have failed (see for example West London Pipelines; XYZ v Various [2013] EWHC 3643 and [2014] EWHC 4056).