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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 >> Investment Invoice Financing Ltd v Limehouse Board Mills Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 9 (18 January 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/9.html Cite as: [2006] 4 Costs LR 632, [2006] EWCA Civ 09, [2006] EWCA Civ 9, [2006] WLR 985, [2006] 1 WLR 985 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL LONDON
CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE (MERCANTILE LIST)
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MACKIE CBE QC
MER05046
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
____________________
INVESTMENT INVOICE FINANCING LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LIMEHOUSE BOARD MILLS LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr. Michael McLaren Q.C. (instructed by Bircham Dyson Bell) for the defendant
Hearing dates : 15th December 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moore-Bick :
"It was not suggested that the joinder of Mr. Sood increased the costs of the action or in any way altered (save in relation to the validity of the sale to him) the issue already joined between insured and insurer. Thus the judge's order cannot be read as a condition that Mr. Sood secure the Cornhill against the costs caused by or thrown away as a result of this joinder (which Mr. Sood was not in any event ordered to pay). It seems clear that the basis of the judge's order was his judgment that the Cornhill should enjoy the same protection in relation to costs against Mr. Sood as it already enjoyed against the plaintiff company under the unappealed order of the district judge.
It is of course true that as a result of the joinder the Cornhill exchanged an opponent which could only proceed if it provided security for the Cornhill's costs for an opponent who could (unless the judge's condition were upheld) proceed without providing such security. To that extent the joinder would, in the absence of such a condition, put it in a worse position. That would be even more obviously so if, as may be the case, the company cannot provide security of £5,000, because the Cornhill would (on this hypothesis) exchange an opponent who is effectively paralysed for one who is not. On the other hand, the Cornhill is in no worse a position than if the company had sold its business to Mr. Sood before bringing proceedings, and he had been the plaintiff from the outset. It is in no worse a position than if, instead of being joined, Mr. Sood had commenced a fresh action as plaintiff. And the potential injustice against which the security order was intended to protect the Cornhill no longer exists: the company's action is stayed unless and until it provides the security ordered; but in Mr. Sood it faces a personal plaintiff who is liable to the extent of his available assets to meet any costs order made against him. Depending on his means, he may or may not be able to meet such an order, but the law affords a defendant no protection against costs which may not be paid by impecunious personal plaintiffs.
Had Mr. Sood been ordered to pay, and give security for, the costs occasioned by or thrown away as a result of his joinder, there could in our judgment have been no sustainable objection to the order. But we can find no justification for the order in fact made."
"Like the Court of Appeal in the Norglen case, I also think that there is nothing in the point that the assignment is invalid because it deprives the defendants of the right to apply for security for costs under section 726 of the Companies Act 1985. For better or worse, the law entitles a defendant to be protected against incurring irrecoverable costs in litigation brought against him by an impecunious company but not by an impecunious individual. But that cannot prevent companies from assigning property to individuals."
"Mr. Jackson accepted that if, as I think, the assignment was effective to transfer the cause of action from the company to Mr. and Mrs. Rodgers, their joinder as parties was necessary. They were the only people who could prosecute the action. But Mr. Jackson submitted that the rule gives the court a discretion and that the Court of Appeal failed to consider the exercise of that discretion in two ways. First, he says that it should simply have refused to make an order on the ground that the prosecution of the action by the Rodgerses would be an abuse of legal aid. Alternatively, he says that the order should have been subject to a condition that Norglen provide security for costs in the amount ordered by Morritt J.
(a) Discretionary refusal
I do not think it escaped the attention of the Court of Appeal that the rule confers a discretion. But the discretion must be exercised judicially and in my view, once it is accepted that, in spite of the finding that the assignment was a "stratagem or device" to obtain legal aid, it is nevertheless valid, there are no grounds upon which joinder can properly be refused."
"It is therefore a proper exercise of the discretion to impose conditions to ensure that the joinder does not put the defendant in a worse position as to costs than he would have been if the new party had been in the action from the beginning. He may be ordered to pay or give security for additional costs caused by or thrown away as a result of the joinder. But the discretion cannot be used to ensure that joinder does not put the defendants at a greater risk as to costs than they would have been if no joinder had taken place. Having to litigate against an impecunious individual plaintiff is a risk of litigation which has to be accepted.
This reasoning seems to me to apply equally to a condition imposed on an application for substitution under R.S.C., Ord. 15, r. 7. Nor does it matter that the condition is imposed upon the original plaintiff company rather than the individual plaintiff seeking to be substituted. The latter cannot require the company to comply with the condition and, unless it chooses to do so, he will either have to put up the security himself or be unable to prosecute the action.
The decision in the Eurocross case therefore suggests that it would be wrong to impose the condition sought by the defendants. It is not however necessary for your Lordships to express a final view on whether this reasoning is correct because, in refusing to order security, the Court of Appeal in the Norglen case did not rely upon it."
"The rule is established that where a plaintiff having failed in one action commences a second action for the same matter, the second action must be stayed until the costs of the first action have been paid. Here the Defendant is only one of the Defendants in the old suit, but he is sued in the same character as before. The Plaintiff in the former suit sued as personal representative of Elizabeth Bunch, he now sues as administrator de bonis non of William Jennens. But though he is not suing in the same character as that in which he formerly sued, he is suing substantially by virtue of the same alleged title. If he recovers any part of this estate from the Defendant he will recover it as a trustee for the estate of Elizabeth Bunch, and I am of opinion that he is to be treated as bringing a second suit for the same matter as the former."
"I am of the same opinion. There is some technical difficulty in the case, for the Plaintiff formerly sued as personal representative of Elizabeth Bunch, but now he sues as personal representative of William Jennens. I think, however, that the technical difficulty is not insuperable, and that we are not prevented by it from saying that this is really and substantially a second action for the same matter."
"The only question remaining is whether the order was right in so far as it stayed the proceedings in the second action until the costs in the first action had been paid. Now, my Lords, I find that it was laid down in a recent case in the Court of Appeal, Martin v. Earl Beauchamp (1), that "the rule is established that where a plaintiff having failed in one action commences a second action for the same matter the second action must be stayed until the costs of the first action have been paid;" and even although the actions were not between precisely the same parties or persons suing in the same capacity, the case was held to be within the rule inasmuch as the plaintiff there was "suing substantially by virtue of the same alleged title." It cannot be denied that in the present case the parties are the same, and that the plaintiff is "suing substantially by virtue of the same alleged title;" and therefore I think that the present case has been properly disposed of in accordance with that rule, which I apprehend is not in any respect confined to the Courts in England but applies as well to the Courts in Ireland, arising as it does out of the inherent power which resides in the Court to prevent a second suit being brought upon the same cause of action until the costs incurred in the first action have been paid. It is impossible for us to interfere with that which the Court of Appeal have done, which was entirely within their jurisdiction, and which I can see no reason to doubt has been right."
"It does not appear to me that any general principle relevant to the present case is to be derived from the Norglen case. In the present appeal the validity of the assignment from VTL to Mr Sinclair is not challenged. While the Norglen case shows that any challenge to it on the basis that it renders section 726 of the Companies Act 1985 inapplicable would have failed, this is of no assistance to Mr Sinclair. Nearer in point is the Eurocross decision, but that shows only that the mere fact that security could have been ordered against the company under section 726 does not give the court a discretion to order security to be given by an individual against whom there is no independent jurisdiction to order security.
The present case is concerned with a jurisdiction which is quite distinct from that conferred by section 726. It is an inherent jurisdiction which, in essence, enables the court to prevent a plaintiff subjecting a defendant to a second, substantially similar, action without satisfying his obligations in respect of the first action. In my judgment it is a jurisdiction which is fully wide enough to enable the court to make an order against the plaintiff in the second action who is the successor in title of the plaintiff in the first action. To my mind it is as if the cause of action had become impaired by the plaintiff in the first action in so conducting that action as to give rise to the probability that a stay will be granted if a new action is commenced without the costs of the first action being paid. The assignee ought not to be in any better position than the assignor in respect of this impairment."
Lord Justice Tuckey: