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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> The Law Society v Karim & Ors [2007] EWHC 3548 (Ch) (05 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/3548.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 3548 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE LAW SOCIETY | ||
-v- | ||
KARIM and others |
____________________
Counsell & Co., Cliffords Inn, Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1LD
Telephone 020 7269 0370)
on behalf of the Claimant
Mr Sean Brannigan (instructed by Messrs Davies Arnold
Cooper) appeared on behalf of the respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE LEWISON:
The intervention relates primarily to two particular matters, one connected with certain building Society advances and the other called the Derany and Khan matter. The three defendants are the two principals in the firm and an employee, and it is accepted on their behalf that they are liable to account in the sense of being required to explain what has happened to money that they received into their client account. On that basis it follows that there is no defence to the Law Society's claim for an account and consequently the Law Society is entitled to summary judgment for an account.
The dispute is about, how much. Consequently what is asked for today is an interim payment in respect of such liability as may be established on the taking of the account.
MR JUSTICE LEWISON
"On making an order in this paragraph or at any later time the Court on the application of the Society may authorise a person appointed by the Society to enter any premises using such force as is reasonably necessary to search for and take possession of any documents to which the order relates."
There is therefore under the Schedule a statutory procedure analogous to the ordinary search and seizure orders.
"We have obviously been concerned to ensure that the intervention agent has all the documents to which he is entitled. Throughout, the time since the intervention in June we have therefore sought to gather information that will help us to get to the bottom of what happened at Karim solicitors. For the reasons set out below I now believe that the remainder of the Karim solicitors files are located at Unit 1, Trafalgar Mews, Eastway E9 5JA title number of freehold EGL412764 title number of leasehold EGL430412 and as shaded red on page 3 of WPS 1 ('the premises').
11. I consider that the source of this information is highly confidential. Details of why I believe that the files are located at the premises and the reasons why I consider our source should be kept confidential are set out in the confidential exhibit to this affidavit. All the details in the confidential exhibit are true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
12. Upon discovering the address of the premises I requested my colleagues in our property department to look into who owned and occupied the premises. A search of the indexed map was conducted (pages 1 to 3 of WPS 1) and from our results we were able to order an office copy from the Land Registry which revealed that the leasehold interest in the premises was held by Mark Norden and Kevin Frederick Crace (see pages 4 to 6 of WPS 1). We believe that Mr Crace is involved with the missing documents to the extent set out in the confidential exhibit WPS 2."
"It seems to be fundamental to any judicial inquiry that a person or other properly interested party must have the right to see all the information put before the Judge, to comment on it, to challenge it and if needs be to combat it and to try and establish by contrary evidence that it is wrong. It cannot be withheld from him in whole or in part. If it is so withheld and yet the Judge takes such information into account in reaching his conclusion without disclosure to those parties who are properly and naturally vitally concerned the proceedings cannot be described as judicial".
"I cannot at the moment visualise any circumstances in which it would be right to give a judge information in an ex parte application which cannot at a later stage be revealed to the party affected by the results of the application."
"To lay down as a basis for a new practice the principle, as in effect it would be on Mr Goldsmith's Submissions, that the statement must be disclosed unless the office holder can show that undue damage such as defeat of the proposed proceedings would or might result from disclosure would in my judgment reverse the apparent structure of the rule, which provides that a party wishing to see the statement must obtain an order of the court to that effect. The principle should be in my judgment that the applicant must show good reason for requiring disclosure before disclosure will be ordered and that disclosure should then be ordered by the court unless the office holder is able to show some more powerful reason for not disclosing the statement or some part or parts of it".
Having considered the cases of British and Commonwealth HoldingsPLC [1992]Ch 342 and WEA Records Ltd -v- Visions Channel 4 Ltd [1983] 1 WLR 721, Mr Justice Lightman said this(1508):
"The answer, as it seems to me, is that the wEa Records Ltd case merely restated a long established rule or principle of natural justice of general application in cases of adversarial litigation. There are two limitations on the rule which it was unnecessary for Sir John Donaldson MR to consider in his extempore judgment. The first is (as I ventured to suggest, in coca-cola -v- Gilbey) that the rule does not apply in non-adversarial litigation, e.g. on applications by trustees for directions whether to sue, or defend proceedings brought, by a beneficiary. The second in that the rule may admit of limited (principally if not exclusively statutory) exceptions. The principle established by the Court of Appeal in Re British and Commonwealth Holdings PIC clearly falls into one or other of those categories. The application by the office holder from order under Section 236 is a special statutory procedure designed to further and facilitate exercise of his statutory investigative powers and functions and must, if the statutory provisions for such investigations are to be effective, enable him to justify the need for the order without having to make disclosures which may frustrate the whole exercise. Rule 9.5 of the Rules of 1986 accords with and confirms the existence and applicability of this exception and it is in no wise inconsistent with the principle of natural justice or ultra vires. I have no doubt that the decision in Re British and Commonwealth Holdings PLC is good law and is an exception (as the judgments in the case recognise) to the general rule, a general rule which the judgments acknowledge, though without reference to its restatement in the wea Records Ltd case".