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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Coulter v Dorset Police [2005] EWCA Civ 1113 (13 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1113.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1113 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE EVANS-LOMBE)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
SIR PETER GIBSON
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GERALD SIMON COULTER | Applicant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
CHIEF CONSTABLE OF DORSET POLICE | Respondent/Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
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MR TIMOTHY CALLAND (instructed by Lester Aldridge of Russell House, Oxford Road, Bournemouth, Dorset, BH8 8EX) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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"15. It is quite clear on the evidence that I have read that the issues that Mr Coulter raises in this application are identical to the ones that he raised before the District Judge on 22nd September last. There is an issue of him bringing additional evidence in respect of the compromise that he says he achieved with one of the respondent's employees.
"16. It seems to me that the law as it has been set out for me, that this additional evidence, which he now seeks to bring, arguably should have been available at the time of the first application. It was I who raised the point with Mr Stubbert [the solicitor-advocate for Mr Coulter] about making an application for an adjournment, which he chose not to do at that time. I would agree on what I have read with the respondents that this is something that was known to him and that it was in issue. Indeed, I have been referred to Mr Stubbert's recent statement at page 133 of the bundle, which makes it clear that it was something of which he was aware and he would have relied on it in certain circumstances if they arose.
"17. So it seems to me that he could, if he had chosen to argue a certain position, gone down that route in front of the District Judge back in September last year. For whatever reasons he presented his case on a certain basis in front of the judge, who did not favour him. It does not seem to me that there is any basis for me now to allow him to consider further evidence. The respondents have said that he has brought certain evidence at that stage and has not succeeded. He is now trying again and taking another point. He should not be allowed to do this. He should have put all his arguments at the appropriate time. If he chose not to do so, which I would say he did not, then he should not have the opportunity of bringing further arguments, particularly when he was aware of them on the first hearing on a separate application."
"Quite simply, it seems to me that Mr Coulter had his opportunity before the judge on 22nd September 2003. He could have produced all the evidence that he now has to hand for the reasons that he did not seek an adjournment or produce it then. I cannot see any basis now for me reopening the issue. My view is it has been clearly adjudicated upon by District Judge Lewis. That order has been appealed unsuccessfully so far as the District Judge's findings are concerned. He is entitled to exercise his discretion and the judge on appeal has not faulted that. So I cannot see that there is any merit in the application that Mr Coulter seeks to bring today, a second application in almost identical terms to that which was before the court and did not succeed last September."
"It seems to me that the principle on which Chadwick LJ relied was what he regarded as being the purpose of this group of sections of the 1986 Act and Rules, which deal with the statutory demand procedure before the presentation of a petition. I can see no reason why the same principle should not also apply to a situation in which, for purely technical reasons, a statutory demand has been served, challenged and disposed of but for those technical reasons a second statutory demand based on the same petitioning debt has been served, and an application is made to set it aside, which raises all the issues which were dealt with on the first statutory demand, and also raises an issue which could have been raised when the first statutory demand was challenged but was not made. The issue on the second statutory demand is precisely the same as the issue on the first statutory demand, namely, does there exist a cross-claim in the debtor which over-tops the petitioning debt?"
Then he went on at paragraph 13 in these terms:
"It seems to me that that which Chadwick LJ was in fact applying, not the principles of estoppel illustrated by Henderson v Henderson but the principle of estoppel by res judicata when he decided Turner v Royal Bank of Scotland. That was the same basis upon which District Judge Field disposed of the application to set aside the second statutory demand on 7th June of this year, which order is appealed to me. It seems to me that it was appropriate for her to do so and I am not able to fault the basis on which she approached the case."
Accordingly, he dismissed the appeal.
"However, in general, it seems to me right in principle and in the public interest that, if a party has raised an argument in a proper forum, where it has been considered in connection with a particular process, in this case a bankruptcy or a prospective bankruptcy, and from which forum he had a right of appeal if he wished to exercise it, if that argument is rejected and he does not appeal, it requires exceptional circumstances before he can raise the same argument at a later stage during the same process."
Neuberger LJ took that point a little further at page 27G, where he said this:
"It seems that the principle enshrined in the passage in the judgment of Vinelott J, [in Brillouet v Hachette Magazines Ltd [1996] BPIR 518] approved by Chadwick LJ, and indeed his own judgment in Turner v Royal Bank of Scotland [2000] BPIR 683, indicates that the principle should not be abrogated simply because the party has found a better way of putting the same point, or wants to put in more evidence to support the same point. If there were evidence from Mr Atherton as to specific facts which really make a difference, and which he was unable to put forward on 11 March 1999 through no fault of his own (eg because it was then unavailable or unknown to him at that hearing) different considerations might apply. However, to my mind there is nothing in the subsequent evidence which justifies my going against the normal rule as laid down in Turner."
The position is different, of course, where there has been no application to set aside the statutory demand, see the observations of HHJ Maddocks, sitting as a judge in the High Court in Barnes v Whitehead [2004] BPIR 693 at 698 and 699, paragraph 12.
"Those observations were plainly obiter in that case; but will be given, no doubt, the weight which they deserve. But they do not have the effect of depriving a court exercising its functions under s 271 of the duty to decide whether or not to make a bankruptcy order on the material which is then before it. Plainly, a court will ask itself whether arguments that are being run before have already been run and failed; and it may go on to ask itself why arguments which have been run before it have not previously been run. But it is for that court to decide whether the conditions which must be satisfied before a bankruptcy order can be made are satisfied."
Order: No order on the substantive issues of the appeal. The claimant is to be relieved of the costs made by the District Judge on 7th June 2004 and of the costs made by Evans-Lombe J on 19 October 2004. No order given as to the costs of this appeal.