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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Mond, R (On the Application Of) v Insolvency Practitioners' Association [2021] EWHC 3325 (Admin) (26 August 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/3325.html Cite as: [2021] WLR(D) 641, [2021] EWHC 3325 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Between :
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the Application of DAVID MOND) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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INSOLVENCY PRACTITIONERS' ASSOCIATION |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr N. Peacock QC (instructed by Gateley Legal ) on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Cotter:
"It is no part of this Panel's function to decide whether if Mr Mond's defence had been conducted along the lines Mr Davies QC suggested, it would have had any greater success than his original defence. The question is whether, had Mr Mond been differently advised, this would have been a possible defence. As will be seen the Panel cannot, on the material before it, decide definitively that it would not."
"77. By a majority, and with some reluctance, the Panel has concluded that, in the circumstances of this case, counsel had got indeed too close. He had been persuaded to give, and in the case of the composite advice concocted by Mr Mond, Doyle 3 to sign, advice the correctness of which might well be called into question.78. The relationship both to the affairs of CDL and DRSP and to Mr Mond personally was such that the necessary objectivity and independence that any Tribunal is entitled to demand were compromised. The Panel accepts that had independent Counsel been constructed to conduct Mr Mond's defence, such Counsel might have advised Mr Mond to run a reliance defence and that such defence might conceivably have led to a different result, even if only as to sanction. It is unnecessary to decide whether Mr Mond would have accepted such advice or whether a different outcome would have resulted from him taking it. It is the loss of the possibility which make the findings below sufficiently unsafe for this appeal to succeed.
79. The appeal will therefore be allowed on this preliminary point and the case remitted to the Disciplinary Committee for hearing before a differently constituted panel. The panel considers it appropriate to remit on the second complaint because it impinges on the first complaint and, in any event, were there to be an adverse finding by the Disciplinary Committee at a rehearing, it would be appropriate for the Panel below to reconsider sanction in light of the new material. Thus the entire case will be remitted."
"As to costs, the Panel is of the view that this can be dealt with on paper. Counsel on both sides are invited to determine between themselves what if any applications for costs are to be made, and thereafter to agree the sequential submissions to be filed. This will enable the Panel to have the benefit of submissions in reply which respond to the original submissions made. In so far as the order of submissions cannot be agreed, then the matter should be referred to the Chair for determination. Schedules of costs should be provided."
"10 While the appeal has succeeded to the extent that the matter is to be remitted to the DC for reconsideration, this is not determinative of the costs ordered by the DC. The Panel is of the view that this order for costs should stand. Mr Mond took the policy decision to contest the complaint against him on the merits, and there was a lengthy hearing during with Mr Mond tried, and failed, to convince the D.C that the avoidance scheme which on his own case was of his own devising (whether or not it subsequently obtained the imprimatur of Mr Doyle) was effected to circumvent the Statements of Insolvency Practice.11. The effect of the Panel's judgment is the potential conflict of interest on the part of Mr Doyle may have deprived Mr Mond of the opportunity of contending before the DC that he had acted on appropriate and competent legal advice. Whether Mr Mond would actually have advanced such an argument had he been independently advised is, to put it neutrally, questionable. But the deprivations of theoretical opportunity to advance it is sufficient to cross the very low threshold for ordering a re-hearing. Were such an argument to have been advanced before the DC, the DC might have been persuaded that as Mr Mond had acted on legal advice his culpability under the rules of the IPA would be considerably diminished. The fact remains, however, that reliance on legal advice would not turn an ineffective avoidance scheme into an affective one. That was the issue on which Mr Mond chose to contest the complaints below in the hope that were the DC to conclude that this was an effective avoidance scheme, he could continue with it (or one similar). That was why it was fought on the merits and the original appeal sought to question the DC's judgment on those merits.
12. It is thus not the case that if the argument of reliance on legal advice had been advanced before the D.C it could be said that the decision on the merits of the scheme would have been any different. Mr Mond fought on those merits and he lost.
13. There is no good reason why the costs order made below should be set aside and this Panel does not do so. The order stands"
"38. If the Tribunal finds the Formal Complaint has been proved in whole or in part, it may order the Respondent to pay to the Association by way of costs such sum as the Tribunal may determine.39. Where a Tribunal makes a finding that the whole Complaint was not proved it shall be open to the Respondent to request the Tribunal to make an Order directing the Association to pay all or part of the Respondent's costs reasonably incurred since referral of the Formal Complaint but any such costs awarded shall be proportionate to the nature of the Complaint and shall only be ordered if the Tribunal considers that the referral of the Complaint by the Committee was in any way improper or unreasonable in the circumstances."
"39. On an appeal from a Disciplinary Tribunal on a Formal Complaint, the Panel may by order: -
(a) affirm, vary or rescind any decision and order made by the Tribunal;(b) substitute for any such order any other order it thinks appropriate which the Tribunal could have made on the Formal Complaint;(c) include in any such substituted order such terms and conditions, if any, as the Panel think appropriate;(d) direct that the Tribunal's Record of Decision to be published under Disciplinary Rule 44…"