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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Pelling v Families Need Fathers Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 1280 (1 August 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/1280.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 1280, [2002] 2 All ER 440, [2002] 1 BCLC 645 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM MR REGISTRAR BUCKLEY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Wednesday 1st August, 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
MR JUSTICE WILSON
____________________
DR MICHAEL JOHN PELLING |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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FAMILIES NEED FATHERS LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Colin Hale, Vice Chairman of Families Need Fathers Ltd
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY:
"I have a discretion under Section 356 (6) of the Companies Act 1985 whether or not to make an order requiring disclosure of the Register of Members.
Having read the evidence and submissions of the Trustee for Families Need Fathers Ltd, I consider this is a case in which it is not appropriate to require disclosure of the Register.
Accordingly I refuse the order sought by the claimant."
Background Facts
"(i) For the relief of parents and their children and other close family members suffering from the consequences of divorce or separation by providing advice, assistance and other support and, in so doing, helping parents stay in touch with their children after divorce or separation;
(ii) To further the emotional development of children whose parents have divorced or separated by encouraging shared parenting arrangements which enable such children to have continuing and meaningful relationships with both their parents;
(iii) To conduct study and research into problems concerned with children who are deprived of the presence of a parent in their families, and into the problems concerned with establishing good relations between parents living apart from their children, and to publish the useful results of all such study and research in order to encourage appropriate changes in professional and public opinion;
(iv) To relieve poor parents by helping to obtain and promoting the provision of free legal advice, assistance and other free legal services which such parents would be unable to obtain by reason of their lack of means. "
" Every member of the Charity undertakes to contribute such amount as may be required (not exceeding £10) to the Charity's assets if it should be wound up while he or she is a member or within 1 year after he or she ceases to be a member, for payment of the Charity's debts and liabilities contracted before he or she ceases to be a member, and of the costs, charges and expenses of winding up, and for the adjustment of the rights of the contributories among themselves."
" (1) The subscribers to the memorandum and such other persons or organisations as are admitted to membership in accordance with the rules made under Article 61 shall be members of the Charity. No person shall be admitted a member of the Charity unless his application for membership is approved by the trustees."
"(1) The trustees may from time to time make such rules or bye laws as they may deem necessary or expedient or convenient for the proper conduct and management of the Charity and for the purposes of prescribing classes of and conditions of membership, and in particular but without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, they may by such rules or bye laws regulate:
(i) The admission and classification of members of the Charity (including the admission of organisations to membership) and the rights and privileges of such members, and the conditions of membership and the terms on which members may resign or have their membership terminated and the entrance fees, subscriptions and other fees or payments to be made by members…… "
The Rival Submissions
Issues on the Appeal
i) Did the Registrar have a discretion under section 356(6)? This is a question of the true construction of the provision.
ii) If the Registrar did have a discretion, is this court entitled to interfere with his refusal to exercise it? In limited circumstances the Court of Appeal is entitled to interfere with the exercise of a judicial discretion. It has to be shown that the lower court has erred in principle in the approach to the exercise of the discretion, or has left out of account a factor which should have been taken into account, or has taken into account a factor which ought not to have been taken into account, or that the decision is plainly wrong and could only have been the result of a failure to balance the relevant factors fairly in the scale. See AEI Rediffusion Music Ltd –v- PPL [1999] 1 WLR 1507 at 1523 B-C.
iii) If this court holds that the Registrar erred in refusing to exercise the discretion, should this court exercise it in Dr Pelling's favour and, if so, on what terms? During the course of the argument we raised the question whether the Company was willing to circulate to its members material which Dr Pelling wished to put before the members in relation to the forthcoming Annual General Meeting. In his submissions Dr Pelling stressed the importance of the right of free communication with members of the Company. Although he had argued that the reasons for his requirement were irrelevant, he explained in his evidence that he required the names and addresses of members so that he could communicate with them and canvass their votes in advance of the forthcoming Annual General Meeting. While Mr Hale indicated that there would be no problem in the Company giving such an undertaking, Dr Pelling responded that the undertaking would be unacceptable to him in view of his lack of trust in those at present responsible for the running of the Company.
Conclusion
i) On the true construction of Section 356(6) the Registrar had a discretion to refuse the order .In its ordinary and natural meaning the word "may" is apt to confer a discretion or power. It is true that there are certain situations where a discretionary power is conferred for the purpose of enforcing a right and is coupled with an obligation or duty to exercise a power, when required to do so, for the benefit of the person who has the right: see Julius v. Bishop of Oxford (1880) 5 App Cas 214 at 223 and 241. This is not such a case. The use of "may" in subsection (6) is in striking contrast to the mandatory force of "shall" in other parts of the same section, such as subsection (3). In the O'Brien case (supra) at p.255 Byrne J rejected the submission that the court had no discretion under the similarly worded provision in section 1303 of the Australian Corporations Law. It was submitted to him that the word "may" in that section was not permissive, but merely signified that the jurisdiction of the court to make an order did not arise unless there had been a refusal or contravention of the Corporations Law. He held that the drafting of the Law was such that " the word "may" means exactly that. It means that the court is empowered to make the order where a refusal in contravention of the Law has been established, as in the present case .Whether the power will be exercised must depend upon the proper discretionary considerations affecting the power in the light of the facts found by the court." We agree. For those reasons we reject the absolutist construction proposed by Dr Pelling.
ii) The statutory discretion must be exercised judicially in accordance with established legal principles and having regard only to relevant considerations. We agree with Dr Pelling that, as a general rule, the court will make a mandatory order to give effect to a legal right. But, as stated by Lord Evershed MR in Armstrong v. Sheppard & Short Ltd [1959] 2 QB at 396 "it is not a matter of unqualified right." There may be something special in the circumstances of the case which leads the court to refuse to make the usual order. The scope of the residual discretion to refuse such an order may be narrow, but Dr Pelling is, in our view, wrong in his assertion that it is non-existent. Indeed, we understood him to accept that there would be cases in which it would be pointless for the court to make an order where, for example, it was no longer necessary to make one, because the request had been complied with after the application was issued but before it was heard, or where the request was physically impossible to comply with because the register had been destroyed or lost. There are other circumstances in which the court is entitled to refuse to make any order or to make one in unqualified terms. It is common , for example, for a court to decline to exercise its discretion to make a mandatory or prohibitory order when the person against whom it is sought has offered to the other side or to the court an undertaking which meets the justice of the case.
iii) We also reject Dr Pelling's contention that the criminal penalties to which the company is exposed under section 356(5) deprive the court of discretion to refuse to make an order under subsection (6). It can certainly be said that the criminal penalties underscore the importance both of the right and of the obligation of the Company to give effect to it, but they do not expressly or impliedly deprive the court of the discretion clearly conferred by the use of the word "may". The line of exceptional cases in which the assistance of the civil courts is invoked in aid of the criminal law amply demonstrates that the civil courts retain a discretion as to whether or not it is an appropriate case for their intervention by making an order to enforce obedience to the criminal law.
iv) Having regard to specific exemption provisions in section 34 of the Data Protection Act 1984, we are satisfied that the making of an order would not contravene the provisions of the Act protecting personal data. Further the construction of section 356(6) so as to confer a discretion on the court would not involve any incompatibility with Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
v) In our judgment, it is possible to cater for both Dr Pelling's wish to gain access to the register for the professed purpose of legitimately communicating with the members and the proper and understandable concerns of Mr Hale about the detrimental effect of an unqualified order for disclosure of the names and addresses of the members, particularly on the charitable purposes for which the Company was established. A reconciliation can be achieved by attaching relevant and reasonable terms and conditions to the exercise of the discretion. As indicated in O'Brien at p.256, it is possible to provide a practical and fair solution either by making an order in favour of the applicant on terms as to the confidentiality and use of the information made available; or, as we suggested , and as was offered in the case of O'Brien at p. 255, by declining to make an order for inspection, on the Company giving a suitably worded undertaking to facilitate communication with members by acting as a post box for mail between the applicant and the members.
vi) The parties should be entitled to address the court further on this point before the final form of order is settled by the court.
Form of Order