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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Three Rivers District Council & Ors v Bank Of England [2005] EWCA Civ 889 (14 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/889.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 889 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, COMMERCIAL COURT
The Honourable Mr Justice Tomlinson
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
MR JUSTICE RIMER
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(1) Three Rivers District Council and others (2) Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA (in liquidation) |
Appellants/ Claimants |
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- and - |
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The Governor and Company of the Bank of England |
Respondent/ Defendant |
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Mr Nicholas Stadlen QC, Mr Bankim Thanki QC, Mr Ben Valentin & Mr Tom Smith (instructed by Messrs Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer) for the respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix :
This is the judgment of the court.
The parties and the claim
"Moreover, I do not share the confidence of the judge and the majority in the Court of Appeal that discovery and cross examination will not produce significant materials assisting the claimants. It is a case which should be examined and tested with the procedural advantages of a fair and public trial."
See also Lord Hope at 263B ("the documents alone do not tell the full story", at para 105) and Lord Hutton at 279 (paras 147, 149).
The issues
"It is true that this litigation is concerned with events starting in the 1970s and continuing until the collapse of BCCI in 1991. In many ways, the most important of those events in terms of the claimants' case is the licensing of BCCI SA in 1980 and the process which led thereto.
It is said by the claimants that the defendants acted deliberately unlawfully in licensing BCCI SA in that they relied on assurances from the Luxembourg supervisory authority in circumstances where they knew that the statute did not permit such reliance.
It is said that they did so either knowing that, in consequence of their unlawful action, depositors in BCCI SA would probably suffer loss, or recklessly knowing that there was a serious risk of such a consequence.
I should emphasise that I am only summarising. The precise formulation of the tort is a matter of controversy and I shall need, in due course, to address the issue in detail and with care. The foregoing will suffice for present circumstances and is not intended to be definitive.
It is the need to conceal the unlawfulness of that initial exercise which is said to have informed, in large part, the conduct of Bank officials thereafter right through until ultimate closure of BCCI in 1991.
The liquidators do, quite independently, assert that the Bank's supervision of BCCI SA was itself conducted in a knowingly unlawful manner.
Put broadly, it is said that the Bank should have regarded itself as the primary, parent supervisor of BCCI SA, rather than simply the host supervisor of branches of an overseas bank, and that, in conducting the supervision of BCCI SA, the Bank should have taken greater steps to satisfy itself as to the soundness of the BCCI Group as a whole, of which BCCI SA and its branches in the UK formed an interdependent part. Again, I stress that this is intended only as a broad, non-definitive summary.
It is the desire to avoid the responsibility for conducting this supervisory exercise which is said to have provided a, and perhaps the principal motive for dishonestly expressing satisfaction with the nature and scope of Luxembourg supervision of BCCI SA, rather than acknowledging that, as is alleged, its principal place of business was in London, or not in Luxembourg, and acknowledging that the Bank for that reason, as is alleged, bore a statutory responsibility for assuming the primary supervisory role. Again I summarise.
It can be seen, therefore, that it is of the utmost importance to the liquidators to establish that the licensing exercise in 1980 was conducted in a knowingly unlawful manner.
So far as concerns the post-licensing claim, the unlawfulness lies in part in the failure properly or adequately to include the group as a whole within the supervisory purview of the Bank, but it is the reluctance ever to undertake that task which is said to have induced Bank officials to act unlawfully in the first place.
Whilst that reluctance is said also to have informed the Bank's post-licensing conduct, much of what Bank officials did throughout the post-licensing period has been attacked as motivated by a desire to conceal from those outside the Bank's Banking Supervision Division the known unlawfulness of the licensing exercise; in the jargon of the case, the guilty secret."
"The Claimants allege that the Bank committed misfeasance in public office. They allege that seven named senior officials of the Banking Supervision Department of the Bank, but not two successive Governors of the Bank, acted in bad faith (i) in licensing BCCI in 1979 [sic], when they knew that it was unlawful to do so; (ii) in shutting their eyes to what was happening to BCCI after the licence was granted; and (iii) in failing to take steps to close BCCI when the known facts cried out for action at least by the mid-1980s."
"The allegations in this case are of dereliction of duty of a high order. Whilst there is scope for argument concerning the role played by bad faith and dishonesty in the formulation of the tort, the claimants have pulled no punches in the breadth of the allegations of misconduct which they have made.
In addition to acting in conscious breach of the statutory provisions, knowing that depositors would probably in consequence suffer loss, or reckless to that prospect, Bank officials, including specifically Mr Quinn, are accused of dishonestly misleading the Governors, dishonestly misleading other overseas banking supervisors, dishonestly misleading the independent Board of Banking Supervision, dishonestly misleading Her Majesty's Treasury, dishonestly misleading Parliament by means of providing ministers – including the Chancellor of the Exchequer – with misleading briefings to which to speak in the House of Commons, of dishonestly misleading the Treasury Select Committee, dishonestly misleading Lord Justice Bingham, and now, in the shape of the evidence which they will give, dishonestly misleading the court."
The trial
"…we are not opening our case in the sense of giving your Lordship an outline; we are actually presenting our evidence, and the documents are evidence, and this is our only opportunity to present that evidence to your Lordship for the purpose of discharging what will undoubtedly be said to your Lordship on a number of occasions as a very considerable burden which lies on us…although your Lordship has had the opportunity to read and has read the documents before the case began, and although your Lordship has seen many of them during the short opening, it becomes apparent that it is only when one manages to go through them with your Lordship carefully and in context, that many of the points which we wish to make on those documents, so to speak, fully emerge for your Lordship's comprehension…As I say, this is our presentation of evidence…"
"The twelve weeks surprises me, I have to tell you, but I am not conducting the cross-examination, and there are all those imponderables. All I propose to say about it at the moment is that obviously we can and must review the position at the end of July and see how we are going and see how progress is…As I say, I keep an open mind about it. We shall wait and see. It is a broad estimate and we will wait and see."
"I also indicated my own view that, whatever the liquidators' public stance, it was unlikely that they would find it either necessary or desirable to cross-examine for a period as long as twelve weeks."
Mr Quinn
"Mr Goddard's letter of 9 June 2005 addressed to my clerk points out, rightly, that there are issues relating to the length of Mr Quinn's oral evidence which we all need to consider sooner rather than later.
For my part I remain hopeful that Mr Quinn's evidence would in the ordinary course in any event be completed before the Long Vacation.
My clerk has suggested to the clerks to Nicholas Stadlen QC and Clare Montgomery QC that we should aim to meet informally in my room on Friday morning [17 June]. I do not envisage anything more than a general discussion at this stage and I certainly do not envisage entertaining any application or giving any ruling although it might well be useful to indicate how I see things at present – it may well be that we all see matters in the same way. If it does emerge that there is a serious difference of opinion as to the appropriate way forward we may of course have to consider convening a formal hearing…"
"…I repeated that sentiment [that he remained hopeful that Mr Quinn's evidence would be completed before the long vacation, as expressed in his letter of 14 June] and indicated that presumably everyone would now sensibly plan upon the basis that Mr Quinn may simply be unfit to return within a reasonable timescale.
I went on to say that unless the claimants were able to tell me, on reflection, that they were realistically aiming to conclude their cross-examination by the beginning of the long vacation, I would be likely to look favourably upon any application which the defendants might make for an order limiting the duration of cross-examination."
The decision below
"…Mr Quinn has been cross-examined extensively on many documents in respect of which there is no evidence that he ever saw them when they were produced, and indeed no reason to suppose that they would be copied to him since they concerned matters which were not then his responsibility.
Then there are documents which might conceivably have been seen by Mr Quinn, even though they dealt with matters which were not his primary responsibility at the time. In respect of such documents, Mr Quinn has been invited to speculate as to their meaning, where it is unclear or ambiguous, in a manner which seems to me, with all respect, calculated to produce answers which are almost certainly inadmissible but are certainly unhelpful."
"There are, however, limits to how far down that road the claimants can usefully go. A witness does not become competent to give evidence in areas about which he has no personal knowledge simply because the party chooses not to call a witness with the relevant firsthand knowledge."
"For the reasons which I have set out, I would feel justified in imposing the limit which I have on grounds of proportionality and general reasonableness alone. The claimants will, in my judgment, have no difficulty in, within the space of 27 and a half days, putting fully and fairly to Mr Quinn such parts of their case as can properly and usefully be put to him.
Some might say that it is my duty, pursuant to my case management role, to impose such a limit. I regard that period as a more than generous allowance.
I also consider that it is wholly disproportionate and unreasonable to expect Mr Quinn, regardless of his state of health, to attend court to be cross-examined for a period in excess of seven weeks and, in particular, disproportionate and unreasonable to expect him to attend for an initial seven weeks' cross-examination only to be required to return at a later date, after an extended interval, to be cross-examined yet further."
"The medical evidence, in my judgment, renders this an a fortiori conclusion. If it is wholly unnecessary for the ends of justice to require Mr Quinn to attend for cross-examination beyond the end of July, how can it possibly be justified to impose upon him, and, I might add, his wife and close family, in the run-up to open heart surgery, the sort of strain and anxiety which cross-examination beyond that date would inevitably involve?…A reasonable and humane approach requires that there should be a terminus ad quem which allows a reasonable period for rest and normalisation after the period of prolonged and intense concentration involved in giving evidence for seven weeks and which means that Mr Quinn will not have to undergo surgery and recuperation knowing that the first thing which awaits him on his recovery is a return to court for an anticipated further five weeks or more cross-examination…"
"For all the reasons I have set out, I regard it as most unlikely that the claimants will be prejudiced by the need to confine their cross-examination in this way. The prospect of such prejudice and its likely nature is, in my judgment, outweighed by the need to treat Mr Quinn in a reasonable and humane manner."
The appeal
The law
"In the Commercial Court and indeed in any trial court it is the trial judge who has control of the proceedings. It is part of his duty to identify the crucial issues and to see that they are tried as expeditiously and inexpensively as possible. It is the duty of the advisers of the parties to assist the trial judge in carrying out his duty. Litigants are not entitled to the uncontrolled use of a trial judge's time. Other litigants wait their turn. Litigants are only entitled to so much of the trial judge's time as is necessary for the proper determination of the relevant issues."
"In Banque Keyser Ullmann S.A. v. Skandia (U.K.) Insurance Co. Ltd. [1991] 2 A.C. 249, 280, …I also said that the appellate court should be reluctant to entertain complaints about a judge who controls the conduct of proceedings and limits the time and scope of evidence and argument. So too, where a judge for reasons which are not plainly wrong makes an interlocutory decision or makes a decision in the course of trial the decision should be respected by the parties and if not respected should be upheld by an appellate court unless the judge was plainly wrong."
Discussion
Conclusion