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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> N W P Woodward v Inland Revenue [2002] EWCA Civ 123 (31 January 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/123.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 123 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE JACOB)
Strand London WC2A 2LL Thursday 31 January 2002 |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
N W P WOODWARD | ||
Claimant/Applicant | ||
- v - | ||
COMMISSIONERS OF INLAND Revenue | ||
Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 020 7421 4040 Fax: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent did not attend and was not represented.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"It also came to my attention by accident that the Inland Revenue have been given the exact days of the hearing set down for the end of this month. I have not been informed and clearly witnesses have to be told well in advance so they can plan around the dates.
The hearing dates allocated will have to be vacated due to my health (medical certificates are enclosed), the pending appeal application and the delay in informing me of the dates of the application."
"This man is currently, following a recent court case, anxious and stressed. I would not expect him to be calm and able to conduct his case in court for another six weeks."
"The case was originally fixed to be heard on 30 April, a Monday. That fixture was made in about October last year. When the case came on, Mr Woodward was not present. I was minded to strike the claim out there and then, but I was persuaded by Mr Newey to give a small opportunity for contact to be made with Mr Woodward. That was done. Therefore the case started the next day. During that day, because Mr Woodward indicated that he was not ready, not a lot happened. So far as the evidence is concerned the case essentially started the day after [Wednesday 2 May].
Mr Woodward's reason for non-appearance on the day the case was due to start was, to my mind, inadequate and remains inadequate. His reason was that in mid-March he had made an application before His Honour Judge Rich, sitting as a Deputy Judge of this Division, for the case to be transferred to the Queen's Bench Division in order that an application could be made for jury trial. His Honour refused that application and refused permission to appeal, essentially on the grounds that the application was made much too late. Quite apart from that, whether or not this case would ever have been appropriate for jury trial, I very much doubt. His Honour's decision was most unlikely to be disturbed by the Court of Appeal.
At the same time, His Honour made an order requiring the parties to put their witness statements in by 5th April, failing which they would not be allowed to give evidence without the leave of the Judge. It was 'as plain as a pikestaff', from his Honour's decision, that the trial date was to stay where it was. Mr Woodward indicated in correspondence that he wished to appeal his Honour's decision. No application was formally made. He wrote a letter to the appeal office. They replied telling him what he had to do. Meanwhile, the date for filing evidence had come and gone. A number of pieces of correspondence indicated that, so far as the Revenue was concerned, the trial was continuing on the day fixed for trial.
On 20th April, the Revenue's solicitor sent a letter, presumably with a large parcel, reading as follows:
'I enclose by way of service the trial bundles. You will note they have been produced in the following format....' (And it is described).
That letter is headed, 'Trial commencing on 30th April 2001', and Mr Woodward is reminded of his failure to serve any witness statements by 5th April. Mr Woodward made no contact with the Revenue following receipt of that letter. The date was fixed and that is that. At the end of the speech for the defence, after all the evidence had been given, Mr Woodward showed me a copy of a letter, which he said had been sent by the Court of Appeal office. He indicated he wished to appeal and said he had assumed that the trial date would be automatically vacated. The letter dealt with a number of other matters. On top of the letter was the handwritten word 'done'. That all happened, I think, before the Revenue sent these bundles. I do not think it was reasonable to assume the trial date had been vacated at all on the basis of that word.
Another reason Mr Woodward advanced for seeking an adjournment, as he did on the first day of the trial, was that he had medical problems. I have seen the medical certificate. That does not indicate sufficient medical problems at all. In fact, throughout the case, Mr Woodward conducted himself without any apparent medical difficulty whatever.
On the Revenue side, they had produced all the witnesses. There were not less than 10 actually called, although originally there were going to be 11 (Mr Woodward accepted the evidence of one of them). A number of those witnesses had to come down from Scotland. To adjourn the trial would have been a gross injustice to the defendants. Not only would there have been an ordinary injustice; in this particular case Mr Woodward was accusing a number of Inland Revenue officials of conduct which can at best only be described as scandalous and perhaps dishonest. They were entitled to have their names cleared and not merely because these allegations had been made in litigation. At an earlier stage, in about 1998, Mr Woodward had seen fit to put up advertisements in and around their place of work, and in one case, I am told, near their home premises, indicating that they were not honest. They were entitled to a trial just as much as Mr Woodward."
"I should just recount how it is that he came to give evidence at all. Judge Rich had indicated that Mr Woodward should not be allowed to rely upon any evidence without having provided a witness statement by 5th April. But there was provision that leave of the Judge could be given. Mr Woodward began opening the case. It became fairly evident that he was going to make a number of allegations of fact, and it seemed to me better that he should do that on oath and be subject to cross-examination rather than leaving it so that his assertion was untested. Besides the Revenue had positive points to put to him."
"As a result of that, Mr Woodward was cross-examined. Document after document, which had been sent to him by the Inland Revenue, was put to him and he claimed he did not know whether he had received it or not. On a number of occasions he did accept that he had been deliberately evading the Revenue: two letters he had marked in his handwriting 'gone away'. He seems to have had a number of addresses. Sometimes he may have been writing letters with the intention that any reply from the Revenue went to the wrong address. A particularly important letter certainly seems to be in that class."
"This case should never have been brought. The accusations made against the Inland Revenue officials involved in the case were wholly a construct of Mr Woodward's mind. They bear no resemblance whatever to reality and I dismiss the claim."
"1. That I have been unable to process this application within the normal time limits due to evidence for the application not being available, and my medical condition.
2. That the hearing commencing the 30th April 2001 breached the Human Rights Act Article 6.
3. That in applying strict time limits without reference to the difficulties of a litigant in person processing legal matters and the complicated nature of this action would be unfair. I would therefore ask the court to exercise its discretion and allow a late appeal."
"1. Delays in obtaining transcript.
a. Judgment - via Revenue
b. Transcription of hearing - not available - no tape of hearing was running according to transcription firms.
c. Time was needed to research grounds of appeal ie Human Rights Acts etc.
2. Litigant in person
a. Limited financial and legal facilities resources to research grounds and procedures.
b. Pressure of work.
c. Health - advised to avoid the case to prevent burnout or breakdown from stress.
d. Complex nature of the case."
"The brevity of the time allowed reflects a clear policy decision in favour of finality. Any party seeking to challenge a judicial decision must move with expedition. In the immediate aftermath of the judgment below both the party and his advisers are fully seized of the case. They can be expected to formulate any grounds of appeal without delay. The Civil Procedure Rule Committee has firmly rejected the recommendation in the Bowman Report (Ch 7 para 7) that six weeks should be allowed for commencing appeals against final decisions."
"The hearing on the 30th April 2001 was unfair and in breach of the Human Rights Act (Article 6)."
"1. The Court in forcing me to proceed with the hearing despite medical evidence I was unfit meant my case was adversely affected and breached my right to a fair hearing.
2. That it was wrong and adversely prejudicial to my case to force me to proceed without proper notice and preparation. (The Court administrators had mis-informed me the hearing on the 30th April 2001 had been taken out of the list to allow an appeal against Judge Rich's order).
3. That the Judge in ordering me to submit to cross examination without proper notice and in conflict with Judge Rich's order that no evidence would be allowed because statements had not been prepared in time adversely and unfairly prejudiced my case.
4. That the Courts in refusing a litigant in person to tape record proceedings unfairly prejudices presentation of the case in breach of civil procedures guidelines and the Human Rights Act."
"6.1 At any hearing, whether in the High Court or a county court, the judgment (and any summing up given by the judge) will be recorded unless the judge directs otherwise. Oral evidence will normally be recorded also.
6.2 No party or member of the public may use unofficial recording equipment in any court or judge's room without the permission of the court. To do so without permission constitutes a contempt of court.
6.3 Any party or person may require a transcript or transcripts of the recording of any trial or hearing to be supplied to him, upon payment of the charges authorised by any scheme in force for the making of the recording or the transcript."