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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Digby v Melford Capital Partners (Holdings) LLP & Ors [2020] EWCA Civ 1647 (04 December 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1647.html Cite as: [2021] 1 WLR 1553, [2020] Costs LR 1759, [2020] EWCA Civ 1647, [2020] WLR(D) 661 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Mr Justice Birss
BL-2020-000588
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE McCOMBE
____________________
FREDERICK JOHN WINGFIELD DIGBY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MELFORD CAPITAL PARTNERS (HOLDINGS) LLP and Others |
Respondent |
____________________
Philip Shepherd QC, Bajul Shah and Aidan Eardley (instructed by Kerman & Co.) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 26 November 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison and Lord Justice McCombe:
"Melford has objected to my contacting you, and threatened legal action should I not agree to refrain from further contact. I do not accept that they are entitled to do this, however to try and find a way forward, I am today offering Melford an undertaking not to have further contact with Limited Partners for a period of 10 days. During this time I have asked Melford to themselves convene a meeting of the Limited Partner Advisory Committee at which I would have the opportunity to be heard, or alternatively to issue proceedings to determine whether or not I am entitled to have further contact with you. I have indicated that I would strongly oppose any such court application,
In the circumstances the call which had been scheduled for 8 April will be vacated and either Melford or I will be in touch with you further once the position has become clearer."
"Turning to your request for an undertaking, our client is willing to undertake, for a period of 10 days, to instigate no further contact with the Limited Partners …provided that within that time scale, you either:-
- agree with us the terms of a notification to the Limited Partners, broadly in accordance with that set out in our letter of 23 March 2020, and ask the General Partner or the Operator of the Funds to convene a meeting of the Limited Partners Advisory Committee to consider our client's demand for an external inquiry; or
- issue proceedings in the High Court in London, for substantive relief as to whether our client remains a Founder member of [the Second Respondent], an English LLP, subject to English law, with an exclusive jurisdiction clause of the English courts, and immediately apply in such proceedings for an interim injunction to restrain [the Appellant] from making contact with the Limited Partners …"
"In the circumstances, it is not accepted that there are good grounds to make an order of the type sort [sic].
But seeking to be pragmatic and to avoid inconvenience, our client would be prepared to countenance the making of an "ex parte on informal notice" order of the kind envisaged in the Draft order, pending an initial return date (or an earlier application to set aside or vary without showing change of circumstances, subject the following points in relation to the draft order…"
A number of issues were then raised as to the form of order proposed.
"114. In all the circumstances, I suggest that the Claimants are not entitled to any form of relief against me, injunctive or otherwise. However, I also recognise that the issues are complex issues, and include bad faith on the part of Mr Hart and Mr Osborne, and cannot be resolved at a short interim hearing without hearing evidence from witnesses. A full and proper consideration of the evidence by the court will be required.
115. In the interests of saving court time and costs, and with a view to progressing this dispute towards as rapid a conclusion as possible, I am accordingly willing to consent in principle (and against appropriate cross-undertakings in damages) to the continuation until trial or further order of the injunctions granted to the Claimants at paragraph 3 of the Order dated 8 April against me, subject to a number of modifications. In so doing, I make no admission whatsoever that the proceedings are properly brought against me in the name of the Claimants, or that they have any basis in fact or law…".
"Your client thereby acknowledges, for the purposes of our clients' applications, that he has unlawfully downloaded and has misused our clients' confidential information…
…If your client does wish to "save court time and costs", as he claims … then it is open to him to consent to the terms of the draft order served on your firm on 17 April 2020 and agree that the 8 April Order should continue without modification…"
"3. …[I]t has not been possible or necessary to resolve the underlying merits of what is clearly a hotly disputed case and I should make it clear that I am not resolving who is right and wrong on the underlying issues that these parties are fighting about. There is clearly bad blood now between the individuals behind all of this and it has not been possible to resolve those questions."
"5. Those decisions [i.e. Desquenne and Picnic at Ascot] were made shortly after the CPR came into force. I suspect the reality is that those two cases have been overtaken, I would say for some years, by the modern approach to costs under the Civil Procedure Rules. In the end, of course, as I said … it is a matter for the court's discretion.
6. If I seek to identify who the successful party is on this application, the answer is the claimants. They have achieved the continuation of the injunctions they sought with some modifications. I do not under-estimate the significance of the modifications from Mr Wingfield Digby's point of view, but the fundamental position is that important injunctions are in place to trial.
7. The point that has concerned me most is whether, if I make the order that the claimants urge me to do, then am I penalising Mr Wingfield Digby for taking a pragmatic approach, not spending two or three days in court arguing the merits of whether these injunctions should be continued over to trial, and reserving his rights? I do see the force in that point. On the other hand, as Mr Shepherd points out, these proceedings exist at all and the injunctions were in place because in the correspondence beforehand, Mr Wingfield Digby's solicitors invited the claimants to bring the proceedings. … There was a discussion about an injunction and the only undertaking offered … was an undertaking not to do these things for a short period of ten days. It is notable that a day or so after that undertaking was offered, Mr Wingfield Digby then did write to the investors concerned.
8. Taking an overall view, this is not a case in which I should do anything other than make what I regard as the usual order, which is that the successful party's costs are paid by the unsuccessful party. That means I am making an order that this application and the costs before Trower J will be paid by Mr Wingfield Digby …"
"Where an interim injunction is granted the court will normally reserve the cost of the application until the determination of the substantive issue (Desquenne…) However, the court's hands are not tied and if special factors are present an order for costs may be made and those costs summarily assessed (Picnic at Ascot)…"
"12. I accept of course that the issue was one for the judge's discretion. In my view, this is one of those cases where this court is entitled and indeed bound to interfere with that exercise. I say so for basically three reasons: the first one is that the decision seems to me to be inherently unjust. It is quite plain from the passage in the judge's judgment from which I quoted that he granted or continued the [in]junction on the basis of the balance of convenience in order to hold the ring until the dispute between the parties could be properly decided at a trial. It is inconsistent with an order such as that, that there should be successful or unsuccessful parties for the purposes of the rules either new or old.
13. Second, it seems to me that the judge was wrong, therefore, in determining, for the purposes of rule 44.3.2 [now CPR 44.2(2)] that either Mr Richardson was the unsuccessful party, or alternatively that the employer was the successful party. He was right to consider within the terms of that rule whether to make an order about costs. That was what he did. But the order that he made was, going back to rule 44.3.1(a) whether the costs should be made payable by one party to another. That seems to me to have been wrong: there were no successful or unsuccessful parties at that stage and the proper orders to be considered were those under the practice direction to which I have referred[1]
14. The third reason for thinking that the judge made an error of law was in the passage in his judgment where he refers to the general rule that the Court will make a summary assessment of costs … For my part, I think, therefore, that each one of those three reasons is a sufficient and good reason for setting aside the judge's exercise of his discretion; in that event the discretion has to be exercise by this Court. It follows from what I have said already that it seems to me that the only proper exercise must be that the costs of both parties are to be reserved to the trial judge because only then can it be determined which party is successful and which is unsuccessful… "
Morison J said that he agreed and said that he thought it was clear that the new rules had somehow or other led the judge unwittingly to make an order which was "manifestly unjust".
"This is a dispute over costs. At one time it might have been said that it was only about costs. But litigation has become so expensive that there is no 'only' about cost any more. The ruling on costs can easily be the most important decision in the case."
" …
(3) A defendant who accedes to the grant of an interlocutory injunction before a hearing should not for that reason alone, normally be subject of a more disadvantageous order for costs than if he had fought and lost. It would be, as I see it illogical and contrary to the modern approach if a defendant were discouraged from agreeing to a sensible course by knowing that he was likely to be worse off in terms of costs than if he incurred the cost, time and effort in fighting.
(4) There will obviously be circumstances where it is right to depart from the general approach. Thus there may be cases where the balance of convenience is so clear, and the outcome of the hearing of the application for the interlocutory injunction should be so plain to the parties, that the court should conclude that an order should be made against the defendant for wasting time and money in fighting the issue (whether or not the defendant eventually concedes). "
"15. … If, …., the court's view on the merits is based on incontrovertible facts or the construction of a document which is accepted by the parties as governing their relationship, then that is something which the court can, to my mind, properly take into account as pointing towards a more favourable order for costs from the claimant's point of view than costs reserved."
However, as already noted in our case, the judge said expressly that he was unable to take merits into account. Mr Shepherd also relied upon a further passage in this judgment where Neuberger J said that:
"… in many cases where a claimant comes to court to seek an interlocutory injunction, it transpires, either at the hearing of the interlocutory application or at the final hearing that the defendant brought the proceedings on himself and has left the claimant with no alternative but to bring the proceedings."
Mr Shepherd submits that such is the present case.
Note 1 Then PD 44 para. 2.5 – see para. 9 of Morritt LJ’s judgment, now Practice direction 44 para. 4.2, as to the variety of orders available in proceedings before trial. [Back]