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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 >> Secretary of State for Business Enterprise & Regulatory Reform v Aaron & Ors [2008] EWCA Civ 1146 (16 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/1146.html Cite as: [2009] CP Rep 10, [2009] BCC 375, [2008] EWCA Civ 1146, [2009] 1 BCLC 55, [2009] Lloyd's Rep FC 1, [2009] Bus LR 809 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
THOMAS IVORY QC
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
Claim No 8630 of 2005
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
and
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
____________________
The Secretary of State for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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David Meyer Aaron Andrew Cameron Jones Michael Meyer Aaron |
Appellant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Guy Newey QC and Andrew Westwood (instructed by Howes Percival) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 4 July 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thomas:
Background
i) The first defendant, David Aaron, was the Chairman and Chief Executive of David M Aaron (Personal Financial Planners) Limited (DMA). The second defendant, Andrew Jones, was the investment director of DMA; he became the compliance officer in 2002. The third defendant was the technical director of DMA, being responsible for the provision of technical support in all areas of financial planning. DMA was a company regulated by the Personal Investment Authority (PIA) until November 2001 and thereafter by the FSA.ii) The business of the firm was run as a partnership until 30 September 2000 when DMA was incorporated. It acted as an independent financial adviser and was authorised under the FSMA to advise and enter into deals in investments. It had about 27,000 active clients.
iii) In the period 1998 to 2003 about 28% of its business was structured products. A part of that business in structured products, though it was not possible to tell precisely how much, related to advice and the sale of structured capital at risk products ("SCARPs").
iv) SCARPs are financial arrangements which give investors a guaranteed fixed income or growth on the initial capital invested over a fixed term; the return of the initial capital invested is linked to a specific measure such as a designated index or basket of stocks. Although the income is guaranteed, the return of the initial capital invested is dependent upon the performance of the designated index or basket of stocks to which it was linked.
v) DMA sold SCARPs either as direct sales to investors on the basis of material it provided to potential investors or on the basis of advice. About 85% was sold on the basis of written materials.
vi) In March 2002 the FSA conducted an industry-wide review of the sale of SCARPs. The review of DMA included an examination of training materials, sales documentation and complaints. The complaints related to the loss of capital on the maturity of the SCARP in which members of the public had invested. It was alleged there had been mis-selling. Concerns were identified regarding the suitability of sales. As a result a visit to DMA was undertaken in March 2003.
vii) After further action by the FSA, on 23 June 2003 the FSA commenced an investigation under s.167/168 of FSMA into the sale of SCARPs by DMA. The investigation included interviews of the officers of DMA.
viii) On 8 December 2003 the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) upheld 4 complaints against DMA and awarded compensation. As a result the directors of DMA consulted the FSA and KPMG. In consequence, and with the approval of the FSA, on 18 December 2003 the directors resolved to place DMA into administration. On 22 December 2003 DMA went into administration.
ix) On 30 April 2004 the FSA published its investigation report on DMA.
x) Subsequently, after considering representations from the defendants, on 25 August 2004 the FSA by a Final Notice cancelled DMA's authority to carry on business.
i) DMA's process for categorizing risks was flawed.ii) In promoting the sales of SCARPs DMA did not give a proper explanation or advise correctly on their suitability for investors. DMA did not provide customers with an objective view; it played down the risks associated with the return of capital and so mis-sold SCARPs.
iii) In the risk ratings allocated to SCARPs by DMA, the risk rating was too low.
iv) The literature did not sufficiently emphasise the risks as to the return of the capital invested.
v) DMA's advertising material did not give sufficient information to enable the customer to make an informed decision.
vi) DMA's record-keeping was defective. The compliance officer failed to pay adequate attention to his role and spent too much time selling products.
The FSA Report and Final Notice set out the relevant principles of the FSA and the FSA/PIA rules which it was said that DMA had breached and the facts relied on for those breaches.
The application by the Secretary of State
i) Under s.6 of the CDDA the court is obliged to make a disqualification order where the court is satisfied that the person has been a director of a company which has become insolvent and that his conduct as a director of the company makes him unfit to be concerned in the management of a company. Under s.7, the Secretary of State is entitled to make such an application within 2 years of the date on which the company became insolvent; it was under this section the application against the defendants was made.ii) Under s.8 of CDDA the Secretary of State can apply for an order for disqualification if it appears to him "from investigative material that it is expedient in the public interest" that a disqualification order should be made against a person who has been a director of the company. "Investigative material" includes a report by Inspectors under s.437 of the Companies Act 1985, a report made by Inspectors under ss. 167 and 168 of the FSMA and information obtained under the investigations provisions in ss. 165, 171, 172, 173 and 175 of FSMA. The court will make a disqualification order where it is satisfied that his conduct in relation to the company makes him unfit to be concerned in the management of it.
"The case against the defendant
(1) There shall, at the time when the application is issued, be filed in court evidence in support of the application for a disqualification order; and copies of the evidence shall be served with the application on the defendant.
(2) The evidence shall be by one or more affidavits, except where the claimant is the official receiver, in which case it may be in the form of a written report (with or without affidavits by other persons) which shall be treated as if it had been verified by affidavit by him and shall be prima facie evidence of any matter contained in it.
(3) There shall in the affidavit or affidavits or (as the case may be) the official receiver's report be included a statement of the matters by reference to which the defendant is alleged to be unfit to be concerned in the management of a company.
i) To ensure that he was sufficiently concerned with the regulatory responsibilities that applied to DMA.ii) Adequately to understand or take account of the risks associated with SCARPS.
iii) To ensure that the advertisements and promotional material issued on behalf of DMA were clear, fair and not misleading.
iv) To use within DMA's promotional literature material provided by journalists in an appropriate manner.
v) To make suitable recommendation to customers.
vi) To keep adequate records of the manner in which DMA assessed and discussed the risks of SCARPs and complete records of individual sales.
vii) To ensure that DMA's compliance procedures were adequate and properly followed.
The objection made by the defendants to the evidence served; the course of the proceedings
i) The Secretary of State set out 935 statements of fact or statements of mixed fact and opinion and identified by documents and page number where the statement was to be found.ii) The response of the defendant directors was to accept some as statements of law or fact and in respect of others to require sight of documents before acceptance or to accept some subject to qualification or to reject them. The defendant directors did not accept as accurate the overwhelming majority of statements of mixed fact and opinion. They made clear that opinion evidence was in any event inadmissible.
This was completed by 24 August 2006; as Mr Bannister QC, on behalf of the defendant directors, succinctly summarised it in his skeleton argument: "as an attempt to refine the issues, it proved futile"
The issue and the contentions
i) Statements of what the FSA Investigators had been told by witnesses: this is hearsay in the ordinary sense of the term.ii) Findings of fact reached by the FSA Investigators from the interviews conducted and the enquiries made
iii) Conclusions of the investigators reached in relation to the conduct of the business of DMA by the defendants, particularly in relation to risk assessment, mis-selling and rule breaches.
"3. Rationalise it as one will, the decision in this case offends one's sense of justice. The defendant driver had been found guilty of careless driving by a court of competent jurisdiction. The onus of proof of culpability in criminal cases is higher than in civil; the degree of carelessness required to sustain a conviction for careless driving is, if anything, greater than that required to sustain a civil cause of action in negligence. Yet the fact that the defendant driver had been convicted of careless driving at the time and place of the accident was held not to amount even to prima facie evidence of his negligent driving at that time and place. It is not easy to escape the implication in the rule in Hollington v. Hewthorn that, in the estimation of lawyers, a conviction by a criminal court is as likely to be wrong as right. It is not, of course, spelt out in those terms in the judgment of the Court of Appeal, although, insofar as their decision was based mainly upon the ground that the opinion of the criminal court as to the defendant driver's guilt was as irrelevant as that of a bystander who witnessed the accident, the gap between the implicit and the explicit was a narrow one.
4. It is in a sense true that a finding by any court that a person was culpable or not culpable of a particular criminal offence or civil wrong is an expression of opinion by the court. But it is of a different character from an expression of opinion by a private individual. In the first place, it is made by persons, whether judges, magistrates or juries, acting under a legal duty to form and express an opinion on that issue. In the second place, in forming their opinion they are aided by a procedure, of which the law of evidence forms part, which has been evolved with a view to ensuring that the material needed to enable them to form a correct opinion is available to them. In the third place, their opinion, expressed in the form of a finding or verdict of guilty or not guilty in criminal proceedings or a judgment in civil proceedings, has consequences which are enforced by the executive power of the state."
The recommendations were enacted in the Civil Evidence Act 1968. However, the Committee recommended against any change in relation to findings in all other proceedings (see paragraphs 38-39). They did so for reasons that can be viewed as sensibly applying to ordinary civil proceedings. Parliament accepted this recommendation and made no change to the law in the Civil Evidence Act 1968.
The scope of the implied exception to the strict rules of evidence in disqualification proceedings
"It seems to me that it would not be in accordance with the apparent intention of the section that, where inspectors appointed under the Act have made a report, the court should not be entitled to look at that report and accept it, not as hearsay evidence, but as material of a different character altogether, and should have to be satisfied anew by evidence of the ordinary nature as to the facts found in the report."
"it ought to be treated as prima facie evidence and it ought to be left to a Judge in any case, having read the report and having seen the witnesses, to make up his own mind whether it is just and equitable to wind up the company. The whole machinery of the inspectors' report was evolved in order to enable the Secretary of State to present a winding up petition where the Secretary of State considers the public interest so demands. It would be unfortunate if once the Secretary of State has reached that conclusion on proper grounds based on the inspectors' detailed report, that the court should be right back to square one and start again as if the inspectors had never come on the scene at all. A great deal may depend on the on the contents of the report and the evidence set out in the report; but I would hope that a report of this nature would be accepted by the court as being prima facie evidence of the main conclusions drawn by the inspectors. Once evidence is sworn to the contrary, then if the Secretary of State fails to support the report by direct evidence which removes nay doubt cast on the validity of the inspectors' conclusions the court would not be slow to dismiss the petition"
Both decisions were followed by Dillon J in Re St.Piran Limited [1981] 1 WLR 1300, another winding up case. He observed in relation to Pennycuick's decision,
"the reason why he held that the Secretary of State was entitled to rely on the inspectors' report to support his petition was a combination of two factors, first, that the report was not ordinary hearsay evidence because the inspectors acted in a statutory fact-finding capacity, and secondly, that it would be nonsensical if the court could not take the report into consideration in deciding whether it was just and equitable that the company should be wound up when on the very terms of section 169 (3) of the Act of 1948 as of section 35 of the Act of 1967, it is on the basis of his consideration of the report that the Secretary of State has concluded that it is expedient that the winding up petition should be presented or that the company should be wound up. It would be strange in that context if Parliament had intended that the Secretary of State should have to rely on entirely fresh evidence and should not be able to present the report to the court and rely on the findings of the inspectors."
It is clear from these decisions that the exception as to admissibility of the reports of inspectors appointed under the Companies Acts was not confined to hearsay evidence, but included the evidence of the findings and opinions of the inspectors.
"In my view the approach adopted by the Court to the use of the contents of an inspector's report in a winding up petition is equally applicable on an application for a disqualification order founded on such a report. That is so because the rationale underlying the use of the contents of an inspectors' report on a winding up petition is equally applicable to a disqualification application based on the contents of such a report. In the latter case as much as the former, Parliament must have intended the Secretary of State should be able to present a case to the Court founded upon the information gathered by the inspectors and set out in their report.
He added at page 15:
"There is a measure of practical good sense in a procedure whereby the plaintiff has first to set out his case, with sufficient clarity and identification of the evidence being relied on for the defendant to know where he stands. Then the defendant puts in his evidence. The plaintiff can see what factual issues there are, and then he can take steps and incur expense in adducing where necessary first hand evidence on these issues, before the hearing. In this way the genuine issues can be resolved properly and fairly in the interests of the defendant and in the public interest. This procedure does no prejudice a fair and just trial of the issues."
Although what was in issue was hearsay evidence set out in materials obtained under powers contained in the Companies Act, the Vice-Chancellor did not distinguish between what was hearsay and what constituted opinion evidence or findings of fact. His conclusion was upheld by the Court of Appeal at [1994] Ch 350 at p.364-368. Hoffmann LJ made clear that the principle developed in relation to winding up also applied to disqualification proceedings under s.8 of the CCDA: he said at 367A:
"In my judgment, these distinctions go to weight rather than admissibility. In a disqualification application hearsay evidence untested by cross-examination of the informant may be insufficient to satisfy the burden of proof against opposing evidence. It will depend upon the facts and probabilities of each case. Once the Secretary of State knows from the opposing affidavits which material facts are seriously in dispute, he may be well advised to reinforce his case by affidavits from the appropriate informants. But that is no reason why their hearsay evidence obtained under section 447 should be inadmissible. Much of what they say may be uncontested, in which case it would have been a waste of time and money to insist that they swear affidavits."
In his concurring judgment, Staughton LJ pointed out that this was a well developed exception: at page 369A he added:
"How then can the Secretary of State be entitled to use affidavits of information and belief in disqualification proceedings? As Hoffmann L.J. has shown, this stems from an implied statutory provision as to the use of hearsay as evidence, or at any rate as provisional evidence until it is challenged. That doctrine is now of respectable antiquity, having been established between 1967 and 1975. I would for my part have hesitated to accept it when first propounded. But as it has existed for a substantial period of time, during which relevant statutory provisions have been replaced and re-enacted or amended, I would not now alter it."
"A logical distinction might have been made between cases where the Secretary of State was seeking a winding up order and cases where he was applying for a disqualification order; but this court refused to make it. A similar distinction might alternatively have been made between cases where the Secretary of State was acting upon a formal report by outside inspectors, where section 441 of the Companies Act 1985 covers the situation, and information obtained by officials appointed under section 447, where there is no comparable provision; but the court refused to draw it. Once the last step was taken, I can see no discernible distinction between an application for a disqualification order by the Secretary of State based on information gathered for him by his own officials and one based on information supplied to him by an office holder. In both cases the information is obtained by a professional man or an official acting in pursuance of statutory powers to compel the provision of information. In both cases the information will necessarily include hearsay but it will be the material on which the Secretary of State decides that a particular regulatory response is necessary. In both cases it would be nonsensical if the court could not take it into account at least unless and until it is challenged by direct evidence to the contrary. The safeguards, in my opinion, are threefold: first, the information is obtained by a professional insolvency practitioner or an official in the Department of Trade and Industry, who must have judged it prima facie worthy of credence; secondly, it is considered by the Secretary of State, who must have judged it sufficiently credible to form the basis of his own opinion and to base an application to the court upon it; and, thirdly, the respondent whose conduct is impugned has every opportunity to rebut it and, if the evidence is not later supported by direct evidence, to invite the court to reject it."
Although both Rex Williams Leisure and Ashcroft were concerned with the admissibility of hearsay, the court in each case approved the statements of principle set out in the earlier cases as to the general admissibility of what was contained in reports and other materials obtained under the statutory powers.
"It seems to me to be implicit in the decision of Evans-Lombe J that findings of primary and secondary fact (as noted above, evaluative judgments are to be excluded for present purposes) are also admissible as evidence in these proceedings. But in any event, whether or not that be strictly correct, I take the view that the implied statutory exception identified in Re Rex Williams Leisure plc, the wide-ranging nature of which was explained by Millett LJ in Ashcroft (at 81-82) – a passage quoted by Evans-Lombe J in his judgment in Re Barings plc (in admin) (No 2), Secretary of State for Trade and Industry v Baker (No 2) [1998] 1 BCLC 590 (see at 594-595) – covers findings of fact, as well as pure hearsay statements.
The weight to be attached to such evidence is of course a matter for the court."
On appeal this part of his decision was not challenged, but although the issue was therefore not argued before the court, Morritt LJ, in giving the judgment of the court, observed at p.537f of [2001] BCLC 523 that the court had no reason to doubt the validity of the Judge's conclusions.
"26. I am unable to accept the distinction on which counsel for the Secretary of State relies. Even if Hollington v F.Hewthorn & Co.Ltd could originally have been confined to cases in which the earlier decision was that of a court exercising a criminal jurisdiction, it has stood for over 60 years as establishing a much broader proposition. There was no criminal prosecution in any of the other cases to which I have referred except Hui Chi-Ming v R. The submission of counsel is inconsistent with the judicial statements made in each of the other cases to which I have referred, in particular of Lords Steyn, Hope of Craighead and Hutton in Three Rivers District Council v Bank of England. It is true that in most of them the decision in question was not that of a court, but of inspectors appointed under the Companies Act, an arbitrator or extra-statutory investigators. But that feature was not the basis of the decision in any of those cases and cannot account for the dictum of Balcombe LJ in Symphony Group plc v Hodgson or the decision of Keene J in Hawaz v The Thomas Cook Group Ltd.
27. Accordingly I would accept the submission of counsel for Mr Bairstow that the factual findings and conclusions of Nelson J in the earlier proceedings are not admissible as evidence of the facts so found in these proceedings. Counsel for the Secretary of State accepted that he could not rely on any statutory or common law exception to render those conclusions admissible for the purpose of proving those facts. Thus it is unnecessary to consider further the decisions of Evans-Lombe or Jonathan Parker JJ in Re Barings plc. Counsel for the Secretary of State also accepted that if the factual conclusions of Nelson J are inadmissible there is nothing in the Civil Procedure Rules, in particular CPR Rule 32.1, to alter the position."
The FOS decisions, the final notice and the other materials
"not reveal that in either [Rex Williams and Ashcroft] that the Court is prescribing as a rule that only evidence gathered pursuant to the relevant statutory powers is capable of being given in the affidavit sworn by the provider of information to the Secretary of State. "
The further conduct of the proceedings
Lord Justice Keene
Lord Justice Buxton