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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Irish Court of Appeal >> Scotchstone Capital Fund Ltd & Anor v Ireland & Anor (Unapproved) [2022] IECA 275 (05 December 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IECA/2022/2022IECA275.html Cite as: [2022] IECA 275 |
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COURT OF APPEAL
Neutral Citation Number [2022] [IECA 275
Record No: 2020 149
Donnelly J.
Faherty J.
Ní Raifeartaigh J.
Scotchstone Capital Fund Ltd
Appellant
AND
Piotr Skoczylas
Applicant/Appellants
AND
Ireland and the Attorney General
Respondents/Respondents
JUDGMENT of the Court delivered on the 5th day of December 2022
Introduction
a) to vary/set aside/rescind the judgment of this Court of 31st January, 2022 pursuant to the jurisdiction identified in Re Greendale Developments Ltd. (No. 3) [2000] 2 IR 514; (“the Greendale relief”)
b) to correct what he contends are “material and decisive errors” in the said judgment, pursuant to the jurisdiction identified in Nash v Director of Public Prosecutions [2017] IESC 51 and Bailey v Commissioner of An Garda Síochana [2018] IECA 63 (“the Nash relief”)
c) alternatively, an order to stay these proceedings and to stay any order striking out this case pending the outcome of other proceedings in which the appellants seek to challenge the constitutionality of the Credit Institutions (Stabilisation) Act 2010. (Dowling & Ors v Minister for Finance & Ors (Rec. No. 2013/2708P))
3. Scotchstone Ltd, the first appellant, did not issue a motion. Subsequent to the issuing of the Greendale motion by the applicant, the Court was apprised that the first appellant had instructed Flynn O’Donnell Solicitors (who had acted for the first appellant in the appeal) to retain counsel for the purposes of making submissions in relation to the Greendale motion. One set of submissions was filed by the appellants (signed by the applicant in person and senior counsel, whom the Court was informed was instructed by Mr. Shane O’Donnell of Flynn O’Donnell Solicitors), each adopting the other’s submissions. There was a change of solicitor for the company in October 2022. The new solicitor issued a motion to come off record on the 26th October 2022. That motion has been adjourned, at the request of the applicant, for hearing to the 7th December 2022. Hence, at the hearing of the motion on 2nd November 2022, the applicant was not represented.
4. A brief background to the history of these proceedings is necessary. The appellants, as plaintiffs, sought a declaration that Ireland was obliged to make good damages allegedly caused to them by infringements of EU law for which it is claimed Ireland was responsible. The appellants relied on Case C-224/01 Köbler v. Österreich, Case C-173/03 Traghetti del Mediterraneo SpA v Italy and Case C-160/14 João Filipe Ferreira v Portugal. For ease of reference these proceedings will be called the Köbler proceedings.
The Judgment of 31st January 2022
“the case is fundamentally very straightforward and is founded upon a single contention from which all the various claims and arguments are derived. This fundamental contention is that the Irish courts in the Dowling litigation (including the Supreme Court, which is the relevant court for the purposes of the Köbler doctrine) misinterpreted the Court of Justice decision in Dowling and accordingly were in error in how they addressed the issues of EU law in the Dowling litigation after the case’s return from Europe. The appellants’ case, no matter how it is formulated, is dependent upon this keystone, namely a particular interpretation of the CJEU decision in Dowling. If that keystone is removed the remainder of the edifice falls, complex though the case may seem on its face and lengthy though the pleadings are.”
11. The Court went on to note that the proceedings before it raised issues concerning questions of law, not questions of fact, and stated at para 342:
“Accordingly, we are of the view that the appellants’ claim that the Irish court manifestly infringed their EU law rights by reason of the manner in which they (or any of them) approached the issues of EU law is bound to fail because it is based on the appellants’ misinterpretation of the clear and unequivocal CJEU decision in Dowling. Indeed, we not only think that the appellants are bound to fail in their claim that the courts “manifestly” infringed their EU law rights, but that they are bound to fail in any claim that the courts infringed their EU law rights at all.”
Reliefs (a) and (b) sought in this motion
The Greendale (and Nash) jurisprudence
“In her judgment in Greendale, Denham J. held that this Court has a jurisdiction and a duty to protect constitutional rights, so that the powers of the Court should be as ample as required to protect such rights. On this basis, she held that this Court has the power to overturn a final order where an applicant successfully establishes that allowing the order in question to remain in place would infringe on their constitutional rights. Some of the language used in the judgment might, if read out of context, suggest a relatively low threshold for there could be a number of circumstances where it might be contended that constitutional rights might be engaged. However, Denham J. expressly stated that this jurisdiction to set aside a final order should be exercised only in very exceptional circumstances and she emphasised that there is a heavy burden on an applicant who seeks to establish that such circumstances are present.” (at paragraph 2.2)
16. Clarke CJ. referred to other instances where the Court had emphasised the high degree of exceptionality and the heavy burden on an applicant. McGuinness J. in Bula Ltd v Tara Mines Ltd (No 6) [2000] 4 IR 412 had stressed the fact that the jurisdiction established in Greendale exists as an exception to the principle of finality found in the Constitution. Clarke CJ. quoted from Murray J. in L.P. v M.P. [2002] 1 IR 219 as follows: “…. the exceptional circumstances which could give rise to the inherent jurisdiction of the court must constitute something extraneous going to the very root of the fair and constitutional administration of justice.” In the decision in DPP v McKevitt [2009] IESC 29, when considering whether the Court has jurisdiction to consider re-opening one of its previous decisions, Murray CJ stated:
“[20] …Firstly the application must patently and substantively concern an issue of constitutional justice other than the merits of the decision as such. Secondly, the grounds of the application must objectively demonstrate that there is a substantive issue concerning a denial of justice in the proceedings in question consistent with the onus of proof on an applicant.
[21] Accordingly, insofar as this Court has potential jurisdiction, in the exceptional circumstances referred to in the case-law, to review one of its earlier decisions, an applicant must show cogent and substantive grounds which are objectively sufficient to enable the Court to enter on an exercise, by way of a hearing of an application on the merits, of that wholly exceptional jurisdiction. (For example, a mere assertion of subjective bias on the part of the Court by a dissatisfied litigant could not be a ground on which the Court could have jurisdiction to hear and determine an application)”.
“the principle of finality applies even where there may be a basis for suggesting that a judgment of this Court was wrong. Where new evidence emerges after a final decision of this Court (as opposed to before a final decision of this Court when an application to admit new evidence can be moved) then that, too, is insufficient, in and of itself, to justify reopening.”
i. The applicants bear a “very heavy onus of proof” (Greendale, Denham J.)
ii. The underlying facts must give rise to an issue “going to the very root of the fair and constitutional administration of justice” such that there has been “a fundamental denial of justice” (L.P., Murray CJ) or “a substantive issue concerning a denial of justice … consistent with the onus of proof” (McKevitt, Murray CJ). This must be “a clear breach of the principles of natural justice…such that failure to take steps to remedy such a breach would, in the eyes of right-minded citizens, damage the authority of the court.” (Bates, McMenamin J.)
iii. The exercise of the jurisdiction must be weighed against the desirability of finality to which “great weight” is attached (Bula, McGuinness J.)
iv. The principle of finality applies even where the Court has made an error: “The principle of finality applies even where there may be a basis for suggesting that a judgment of this Court was wrong.” (Clarke CJ, Student Transport).
The parties’ submissions
“The appellants object that the Court of Justice simply does not rule on the validity of domestic measures as such. They castigate the Irish courts in Dowling for their alleged ignorance of this point. The appellants repeatedly submit that the Irish courts, in holding that the Court of Justice had in effect pronounced the direction order, a domestic measure, in accordance with EU law, have applied an “invented novel interpretation of EU law”. However, as we have seen, while the formal position in law is that the Court of Justice claims at the level of principle not to formally rule on whether national measures comply with EU law, this is not the practical reality of the CJEU jurisprudence, as we have discussed earlier in this judgment (see Section 3 above). In some (although of course not all) cases, the reality is that the Court of Justice does in effect and in real terms indicate whether the domestic measure complies with EU law or not. There is, as discussed earlier, a spectrum of the type of answer that the court gives, ranging from “outcome” to “guidance” to “deference” cases, to use the language of one commentator (as set out above). In our view, the decision in Dowling was clearly an “outcome” case within that taxonomy; that Court was in effect deciding the outcome by answering the question posed in the precise manner it did, leaving no room for the domestic court to engage in any further analysis of the EU law issues in the case.”
Analysis and Decision on Greendale/Nash Relief
86. A central plank of the appellants’ submissions in this case is that a CJEU decision on a preliminary reference cannot ever go so far as to apply EU law to the domestic measure which has given rise to the preliminary reference, but rather that the CJEU confines itself to providing a general interpretation of the point of EU law which it then falls to the domestic court to apply. Indeed, the appellants are disparaging of any contrary view and allege that the courts in the Dowling litigation were ignorant of this important distinction and employed an invented, novel approach to the CJEU decision in Dowling itself by interpreting it as having definitively ruled that the direction order did not breach EU law.
87. The appellants cite in this regard an extract from the CJEU Recommendations to national courts and tribunals in relation to the initiation of preliminary ruling proceedings: “Under the preliminary ruling procedure the Court’s role is to give an interpretation of European Union law or to rule on its validity, not to apply the law to the factual situation underlying the main proceedings”. (Italics in original)
“…the procedure laid down in Article 267 TFEU is based on a clear separation of functions between the national courts and the Court of Justice. It is solely for the national court before which the dispute has been brought, and which must assume responsibility for the subsequent judicial decision, to determine in the light of the particular circumstances of the case both the need for a preliminary ruling in order to enable it to deliver judgment and the relevance of the questions which it submits to the Court.”
Precisely the same quotation has been relied upon by the applicant in this Greendale motion, parts of which he has highlighted and on one part underlined in red. Indeed, this quotation is set out at para 92 of the Court’s judgment of 31st January 2022. The Court’s judgment also discussed the decision in Patricello.
35. The judgment of the 31st January 2022 dealt with the central issue of the import of the CJEU decision in Dowling and how it was required to be treated (and was treated) by the Irish courts on return. The applicant strongly disagrees with the findings this Court reached and he is entitled to disagree. That disagreement does not entitle him to seek to rerun those arguments by asserting, in a variety of repetitious submissions, that the Court acted ultra vires in its findings on the very issue that was before the Court on appeal, or that the principle of legal certainty was violated. We are not concerned here with whether the judgment and reasoning of this Court was correct but rather whether it is open to challenge under the high threshold set by the Greendale principles. We reject the argument that the judgment of the Court of 31st January 2022 violated the primacy of EU law - a central norm of EU law - and that the judgment is thus a nullity. Our judgment dealt squarely with the very issue at stake, the interpretation of the decision of the CJEU in Dowling. There was no “egregious abuse of judicial power” as the applicant has claimed, in the Court’s interpretation of EU law in accordance with the case law, or in the Court having set out a theoretical framework for understanding the practical application of that case law. As the substantive judgment demonstrates, the appellants’ arguments were heard and were answered comprehensively.
36. In so far as the applicant argues that there was a “fundamental refusal of justice and fair procedures/process” in how the Court applied EU norms or interpreted the case law of the CJEU - a submission that was advanced in a variety of ways -we reject that submission. There was no question or issue of any denial of procedural fairness as the applicant postulates: the simple fact is that the legal issue that lies at the heart of his Greendale application is one that has already been decided against the appellants in the judgment the Court has delivered on the appeal. It is not sufficient in a Greendale application to reframe the central decision that the court was required to make in the appeal by terming it as a fundamental denial of justice by reference to how the Court analysed the issue in reaching its decision. The Court heard the submissions and reached a determination on the issue having heard both sides. Even if the Court was wrong in that analysis, that does not satisfy the exercising of the exceptional jurisdiction which a Greendale application warrants.
37. We are also satisfied that there was no procedural unfairness in this case where the appellants had the benefit of a full hearing of the appeal. Moreover, we reject the applicant’s contention that the 31st January judgment constituted a “summary” disposal of his case: the Court applied the principles applicable to applications for a strike out/dismissal on the basis that the proceedings are bound to fail or are frivolous and vexatious. Although the respondents, who brought the strike out application, bore a heavy burden, the high threshold for the striking out of proceedings was met in this case; the fact that the proceedings were Köbler proceedings did not debar the application of the strike out jurisdiction.
38. We are satisfied that the applicant has not discharged the heavy onus on him as required by the principles in the Greendale jurisprudence to set aside the written judgment of the 31st January 2022.
Relief (c):
The application for a stay
39. This application was a somewhat unusual one. It was an application for a stay on the entire proceedings (including any decision of the Court on the Greendale motion) until the constitutional proceedings taken by the appellants against the State are concluded. The applicant submitted that to do otherwise would perpetrate an injustice to the appellants. He submitted that as the Court’s judgment of 31st January 2022 explicitly recognised, the 2010 Act, which is being challenged by the appellants in the constitutional proceedings, was instrumental for the rejection of the appellants’ claims in Dowling, where all the judgments in that litigation relied upon the presumption of constitutionality/lawfulness of the 2010 Act. He submitted that the repugnancy of the 2010 Act (were it to be found to be repugnant to the Constitution) would invalidate the 2011 Direction Order, which would thus have implications for the judgment delivered by the Court on 31st January 2022.
40. In aid of his submission that “the strike out jurisprudence allows the proceedings to be stayed”, the applicant referred to Barry v Buckley [1981] IR 306, citing the dicta of Costello J that “if the proceedings are frivolous or vexatious, they will be stayed”. We are satisfied, however, that the Barry v Buckley dicta has no bearing on what the applicant now seeks; he clarified in oral hearing that he wishes the Court not to enter judgment/finalise the order itself until the constitutional proceedings are heard. The Barry v Buckley line of authority clearly envisages that the stay would be a permanent one; stopping the proceedings from continuing at any point. Here, the applicant wishes to keep the Köbler proceedings alive until the outcome of other proceedings.
41. The applicant submits that the overriding consideration for the Court, in deciding whether to grant a stay, is to maintain a balance so that justice will not be denied to either party: hence, rights of significant fundamental importance should be taken in account when deciding on a stay. In this regard, the applicant relies on Redmond v Ireland [1992] 2 IR 362 and O’Toole v RTE [1993] ILRM 454. However, the Redmond line of authority addresses a different scenario; that of a stay on an order in the event of an appeal. For example, in Redmond v Ireland, McCarthy J. set out at page 336 of the Irish Reports a summary of factors that may be taken into account in deciding whether or not to grant a stay. Those factors are clearly directed to a situation where the stay that is sought is one pending the appeal of the decision.
42. This application is not based upon a stay in the event of an appeal; even if it were, it would be difficult to see any basis for granting it. The motion brought by the respondents was that the proceedings be struck out on the grounds that they were frivolous or vexatious or bound to fail. The High Court agreed. The Order of this Court (upholding the High Court) when made, will result in the striking out of the proceedings. Pursuant to the Redmond line of authority, a stay is usually on a part of the order that requires or permits some kind of overt act by the other party, e.g. the paying out of damages in a personal injuries case or the entry into occupation of a premises. Here, however, there is nothing comparable to stay; the order does not require the applicant to take any particular step. We also note that the High Court order does not record that there was any application for a stay on the order: it does record a stay on the costs until the determination of the appeal.
Application for references to CJEU
“Having regard to facts such as the facts herein, must the general principle of EU law mandating that the State may not take advantage of its failure to comply with EU law be interpreted as precluding courts of a Member State from striking out a Köbler type base governed by EU law (such as this case) against a Member State - where premises of the strike-out decision rely on the consistency with the Member State’s Constitution and/or on the compatibility with EU law of a piece of legislation the subject of separate ongoing constitutional proceedings (against the State) impugning said legislation’s constitutionality and compatibility with EU law - before the conclusion of said constitutional proceedings?”
48. We do not find that this is an appropriate question to refer. It is not a matter which arises out of the findings in the judgment of the 31st January 2022. The matter that was before the Court on appeal was solely directed towards determining whether the decision of the High Court to strike out the proceedings was a correct one. This application for a preliminary reference is based upon his request for a stay on entering judgment and finalising this appeal. We have set out above exactly why we refuse the stay requested. We also consider that it would be entirely inappropriate for this Court to refer this issue when the issue did not arise in the proceedings before this Court at any time prior to the delivery of judgment. In all the circumstances, we do not find it either necessary or appropriate, in order for us to deliver judgment on the Greendale application, to make the reference as requested.
49. We would also observe that it is by no means clear that any decision about a stay on proceedings is in fact a matter of EU law. The reference in the question to “the general principle of EU law mandating that States may not take advantage of their failure to comply with EU law” is not sufficient to persuade us that an issue of whether to grant a stay of the entirety of one set of proceedings (post-delivery of judgment) until separate proceedings are determined engages any issue of EU law.
· an absolute legal imperative for it to apply “the formal position in law” under EU law, and not to strike out this case pre-trial because the Appellant relied on said “formal position in law”,
and
· the legal imperative under EU law for the Irish courts to apply the strict proportionality principle of EU law, including the “least restrictive means” test thereunder as pertaining to actions of Member States applying EU law, without being each time explicitly called upon by the CJEU to do so.”
Conclusion
Result: Application Refused and entire proceedings struck out