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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Sciortino v Beaumont [2020] EWHC 189 (Ch) (07 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/189.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 189 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY DIVISION (APPEALS)
On appeal from the order of Master Teverson dated 29 April 2019
Fetter Lane, London, EC4 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
LILLO SCIORTINO |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MARC BEAUMONT |
Respondent |
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Mr Nicholas Davidson QC (instructed by Clyde & Co) for the defendant
Hearing date: 15 January 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE JARMAN QC :
"(1) This section applies where a property comprised in the bankrupt's estate consists of an interest in a dwelling house which at the date of the bankruptcy was the sole or principal residence of –(a) the bankrupt…
(2) At the end of the period of three years beginning with the date of the bankruptcy the interest mentioned in subsection (1) shall -
(a) cease to be comprised in the bankrupt's estate, and
(b) vest in the bankrupt (without conveyance, assignment or transfer).
(3) Subsection (2) shall not apply if during the period mentioned in that subsection –
(a) the trustee realises the interest mentioned in subsection (1),
(b) the trustee applies for an order for sale in respect of the dwelling house,
(c) the trustee applies for an order for possession of the dwelling house,
…
(4) Where an application of a kind described in subsection (3)(b) to (d) is made during the period mentioned in subsection (2) and is dismissed, unless the court orders otherwise the interest to which the application relates shall on the dismissal of the application –
(a) cease to be comprised in the bankrupt's estate, and
(b) vest in the bankrupt (without conveyance, assignment or transfer).
…
(6) The court may substitute for the period of three years mentioned in subsection (2) a longer period –
(a) in prescribed circumstances, and
(b) in such other circumstances as the court thinks appropriate."
"1. The hearing on 19 July 2010 be vacated.
2. The order made on 19 July is set aside.
3. The matter be relisted on …11 October 2010…"
"I have now settled the papers for an appeal. This raises a novel point of law. It has reasonable prospects of success in my view. However, the other side will fight this appeal. They will be upset by it. I strongly advise that we try to settle with them."
"Please remember that if we fight this case and do not succeed, there is a real risk that this will drive up the costs of the bankruptcy and that the Trustee will seek to get a costs order enforced against the proceeds of the sale of the house. The best time to settle this case is if and when permission to appeal is granted."
"The points made in the Appellant's skeleton argument require a detailed response and explanation from the Respondent. In particular, the Respondent must explain (a) why his solicitors did not apparently contemporaneously copy to the Appellant their letters dated 22nd and 27th July 2010 to the Court, and (b) why they did not think it appropriate to draw the significance of section 283A(4) of the Insolvency Act 1986 to the attention of the Appellant before the hearing on 7th March 2011, bearing in mind that he was acting in person.
The stay is appropriate since there appears, in the absence of an explanation from the Respondent, to be a properly arguable point to found the appeal.
I have not granted permission to appeal at this stage in case there is some answer to the Appellant's point, either in fact or law, that does not appear from the materials placed before the court by the Appellant. In particular, I can see that it may be arguable that it was open to the District Judge to withdraw his order of [19th] July 2010, and that the effect of his doing so was to reverse the effect of section 283A(4). This will, if the Respondent wishes, need to be argued at the hearing."
"Every court having jurisdiction for the purposes of the Parts in this Group may review, rescind or vary any order made by it in the exercise of that jurisdiction."
"I have read the so-called Respondent's Notice. I do not see it is any such thing. The evidence seems to me to be inadmissible on appeal. There is no application to adduce it. Say nothing about that please. Plainly the appeal has merit of, I think, 60 per cent prospects."
"I think I will need a short advice on merits from the LSC – without it I don't think they will agree to a further extension. I will also need to know your fee for prep/ the hearing in Nov."
"In the circumstances, indeed it is difficult to see what conceivable basis the bankrupt could have had for resisting the making of the order of 29th July 2010. There had been a plain error given that the letter of 6th July had not got onto the court file. The purpose of the adjournment sought was to assist the bankrupt in order to pursue his dispute with HMRC. It seems to me that it would have been a grave injustice if the order made by mistake on 19th July had not been set aside.
I turn then to consider the effect of the order of 29th July and it seems to me that the order of 29th July was plainly intended to be retrospective. In other words the District Judge was plainly intending that the order of 19th July 2010 should be treated as never having been made. One will never know whether the District Judge specifically had in mind section 283A(4) and the potential effect of that section, although there must be all likelihood that he did, bearing in mind that it had been referred to in the correspondence that he would have had before him."
"The Defendant was in breach of duty and negligent in advising on 26 October 2011 that the section 283A application should be pursued and that it had a good (55% to 60%) and/or advising in his email advice of 4 May 2011 that it had reasonable prospects of success…"
"It is in my view not possible in the context of the allegations of breach of duty and negligence pleaded under paragraph 68 to treat the written advice given on 26 October 2011 by the Defendant as a new and supervening act or omission giving rise to a new cause of action. On the Claimant's case, the advice was part of the same wrongful acts on the part of the Defendant. The test is not whether the advice was an independent piece of work for which a duty of care was owed. It is whether it gave rise to a new cause and separate of action. In my view it was part and parcel of the same cause of action and that is how it is pleaded.
It is in my view significant that in paragraph 68 the allegation of breach of duty and negligence is pleaded both by reference to the written advice on 26 October 2011 and with reference to the email advice of 4 May 2011. That email coincided with the settling of the papers for appeal by the Defendant and accompanied the draft documents. It is in the context of the advice to bring the appeal that the breaches of duty and allegations of negligence under paragraph 68 are framed. This appears most clearly from the underlined parts of sub-paragraphs (vi), (vii) and (viii). By the time of the written advice on 26 October 2011, the appeal had been served and responded to on behalf of the trustee.
It is not sufficient for the Claimant to argue that the written advice given by the Defendant was causative of its own loss. The question is not when the loss occurred but when the cause of action accrued.
There may be cases in which further or supplemental advice given by counsel or a solicitor gives rise to a fresh cause of action but not as it seems to me where the advice is merely confirmatory of advice that has already been given and has already caused one and the same cause of action to accrue. The pattern of advice was continuous as is made clear by the email of 19 October 2011."
"…The defendant solicitors accepted instructions to protect the interests of the claimant in respect of the new lease of flat 26. In accordance with those instructions, it considered the terms of the draft lease in early June 1999 but did so negligently, as it must be assumed for present purposes. That breach of duty of care led later in 1999 to the loss in respect of flat 26 against which it was their duty to protect the claimant. The fact that, incidentally, proper performance of their duty in June 1999 would also have led to the prevention of loss in respect of flat 27 does not change their duty in regards flat 26 into a duty as regards both flats. There are separate causes of action in respect of each flat, and the cause of action in respect of flat 26 was not completed until November 1999 when agreement was reached on the terms of the new lease for flat 26."
"My conclusion is … that the issue is not purely about the merits of a legal argument, but about the appropriateness of the advice in context."