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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Deutsche Bank AG v Sebastian Holdings Inc [2023] EWHC 2563 (Comm) (16 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2023/2563.html Cite as: [2023] WLR(D) 449, [2023] EWHC 2563 (Comm), [2023] 4 WLR 76 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2023] 4 WLR 76] [View ICLR summary: [2023] WLR(D) 449] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
DEUTSCHE BANK AG |
Claimant/Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) SEBASTIAN HOLDINGS INC |
Defendant |
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(2) ALEXANDER VIK |
Defendant for costs purposes only/Respondent |
____________________
Tony Beswetherick KC and Rupert Hamilton (instructed by Brecher LLP) for Mr Vik
Hearing dates: 19 and 20 September 2023
Draft judgment circulated: 10 October 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Henshaw:
(A) INTRODUCTION(B) BACKGROUND
(1) Overview of events to July 2022
(4) The Suspended Committal Order
(5) Appeal from the Suspended Committal Order and resulting deadlines
(6) Listing of the Further Examination
(7) Mr Vik's Variation Application
(8) The Remote Attendance Applications
(9) Issue raised as to expiry of the suspended sentence
(C) CONSTRUCTION OF THE SUSPENDED COMMITTAL ORDER
(1) Principles
(2) Application
(D) APPLICATION UNDER THE SLIP RULE
(1) Principles
(2) Application
(E) CORRECTION OR VARIATION OF THE ORDER UNDER CPR OR INHERENT POWERS
(F) ABUSE OF PROCESS AND COLLATERAL ATTACK
(1) Principles
(2) Application
(G) ESTOPPEL
(H) AGREEMENT TO VARY THE COMMITAL ORDER
(J) CONCLUSION
(A) INTRODUCTION
i) the issue of the status of the suspension imposed by paragraph 2 of the Suspended Committal Order be determined (if time permits) at the conclusion of the further examination of Mr Vik for which the hearing had been listed (the "Further Examination");
ii) for the avoidance of any doubt, Mr Vik is required to attend the Further Examination in person;
iii) on the proper construction of paragraph 2 of the Suspended Committal Order, the term of the suspension thereby imposed ends and only ends upon the conclusion of the Further Examination;
iv) in the alternative, paragraph 2 of the Suspended Committal Order be rectified under CPR 40.12 or varied under CPR 3.1(7); and
v) the suspension in paragraph 2 of the Suspended Committal Order be continued (on the same terms) until the date three months after the date on which the Further Examination (including any adjourned hearing) finally concludes.
i) the Suspended Committal Order, by its terms, resulted in a suspended sentence which came to an end, absent any prior application by DB, on 24 August 2023;
ii) the Suspended Committal Order cannot be corrected under the 'slip' rule in the way DB proposes;
iii) the court lacks power to vary the Suspended Committal Order in the way DB seeks, because it would extend rather than ameliorate the suspended sentence;
iv) for the same reason, the court lacks power to continue the suspended sentence so as to expire three months after the Further Examination;
v) the principles of abuse of process and collateral attack do not preclude Mr Vik from arguing, or the court from concluding, that the suspended sentence imposed by Moulder J expired on 24 August 2023;
vi) Mr Vik is not estopped from advancing his present contention to that effect;
vii) the parties cannot have extended the period of the suspended sentence by agreement; and
viii) I do not construe Bryan J's order made on 1 September 2023, for Mr Vik to attend the Further Examination in person rather than remotely, as being a freestanding direction, independent of the Suspended Committal Order, for attendance at a further examination. Whether the court would have the power to make such an order may be a matter for another day.
My reasons are set out below.
(B) BACKGROUND
(1) Overview of events to July 2022
i) to produce, by 14 October 2015, "all documents in [SHI's] control which relate to [SHI's] means of paying the amount due under the [Judgment] and the [Judgment Order]", including certain specific categories of documents listed in a non-exhaustive Schedule to the CPR 71 Order; and
ii) to attend an examination before a judge on 28 October 2015 "to provide information about the judgment debtor's means and any other information needed to enforce the judgment or order".
(2) The committal application
"an order (a draft of which is attached) pursuant to CPR 81 that for his contempt Mr Vik stand committed to HM Prison Pentonville for a period of six months from the date of his apprehension, and that a Warrant for Committal shall be issued to that effect, with the Warrant for Committal to remain in the Court Office at the Royal Courts of Justice and the execution of it be suspended for a period of six months on condition that Mr Vik complies with the terms set out in the Schedule to that order, after which the sentence and Warrant of Committal be discharged unless prior to that date an application has been made by DBAG to lift the suspension"
(The committal documents use the acronym "DBAG" for the Claimant.)
(3) The sentencing process
"1. Mr Vik be committed to Her Majesty's Prison [Pentonville] for a period of [two years] from the date of his apprehension, and that a Warrant of Committal shall be issued to that effect.
2. The committal of Mr Vik to prison under paragraph 1 above shall be suspended until whichever is the later of (i) a period of the date [six months] from the latest date by which any notice of appeal from this Order must be filed, or (ii) in the event of such notice of appeal being so filed, the date [six months] from the final determination of any appeal from this Order, and the warrant of committal remain in the Court Office at the Royal Courts of Justice, on the condition that Mr Vik complies with the terms set out in Schedule B to this Order, after which paragraph 1 of this Order and the Warrant of Committal shall be discharged unless prior to that date an application has been made by DBAG to lift said suspension."
"2. The Claimant ("DBAG") now seeks an order that, for his contempt, Mr Vik be committed to prison for a period of two years and that the committal be suspended for a period of six months on condition that Mr Vik complies with certain conditions, that six-month period to run from the latest date by which any notice of appeal must be lodged or six months from the final determination of any appeal."
26. She cited the provision in CPR 81.9(2) that "…An order of committal and a warrant of committal have immediate effect unless and to the extent that the court decides to suspend execution of the order or warrant". The judge addressed the question of harm, noting that some $346 million remained outstanding to DB from SHI in respect of the Judgment Debt, and that DB still has far from a complete picture of the assets that might be available to discharge it. Moulder J referred to her findings that Mr Vik had lied to the court at the oral examination hearing in several respects, and to the multiple breaches which increased his culpability. Mr Vik had committed serious and deliberate breaches. Overall, Moulder J concluded that the harm and culpability of Mr Vik's offending placed it towards the top of the range, bearing in mind the two-year maximum, and merited a sentence of 20 months' custody: 10 months as the punitive element and 10 months as the coercive element to encourage future cooperation. The judge stated that Mr Vik's actions were "very likely to have been designed to keep DB out of its money", that his breaches were "of themselves significant and in addition have caused significant harm" and that Mr Vik "continues to do what he can to thwart" DB's enforcement efforts.
27. Moulder J concluded that the sentence should be suspended on conditions. She referred to the observations in Hale v Tanner [2000] 1 WLR 2377 (CA) that "[s]uspension … is usually the first way of attempting to ensure compliance with the court's order" and "[t]he length of the suspension requires separate consideration although it is often appropriate for it to be linked to continued compliance with the order underlying the committal." Moulder J concluded:
"80. As I say, I have hesitated long and hard as to whether or not to suspend this sentence. On balance, I have decided that I should give Mr Vik the opportunity to comply with the order in the sense that he should comply with the conditions which are to be imposed. The draft conditions which are before me are now largely agreed, although there may be some small matters of grammar.
81. Dealing with those matters which I believe are the substantive differences between the parties, Mr Matthews was resisting the formulation "make all reasonable efforts". In my view, the language may or may not make a significant difference but it must be clear to Mr Vik that he is to do his utmost to comply and therefore I prefer the formulation "all reasonable efforts"."
and, after resolving two further unresolved matters:
"84. Beyond that, I think I would hope that typographical, grammatical changes can be agreed between the parties. There has been some progress in the last 24 hours or so. As I say, I express no great confidence as to whether or not these conditions will lead to progress. I very much hope that it will and it seems to me that the authorities would urge me and encourage me to suspend the sentence and therefore that is what I order."
"…UPON the Court being satisfied so as to be sure that Mr Vik has been guilty of contempt of Court…
"AND UPON hearing Leading Counsel for DBAG and Leading Counsel for Mr Vik as to the matter of sentencing and other consequential matters…
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. Mr Vik be committed to Her Majesty's Prison Pentonville for a period of 20 months from the date of his apprehension, and that a Warrant of Committal shall be issued to that effect.
2. The committal of Mr Vik to prison under paragraph 1 above shall be suspended until whichever is the later of (i) a period of the date six months from the latest date by which any notice of appeal from this Order must be filed, or (ii) in the event of such notice of appeal being so filed, the date six months from the final determination of any appeal from this Order, and the warrant of committal remain in the Court Office at the Royal Courts of Justice, on the condition that Mr Vik complies with the terms set out in Schedule B to this Order, after which paragraph 1 of this Order and the Warrant of Committal shall be discharged unless prior to that date an application has been made by DBAG to lift said suspension.
3. Mr Vik pay DBAG's costs of this application on the indemnity basis, subject to detailed assessment. Mr Vik is to pay DBAG the sum of £1,200,000 by way of interim payment on account of such costs by 4pm on 12 August 2022.
4. Mr Vik has liberty to apply to the Court to purge his contempt and discharge the Order in paragraph 1 above.
5. Pursuant to CPR r81.9(3) personal service of this order shall be dispensed with. DB shall serve this Order on Mr Vik by way of email to his solicitors, Brecher LLP.
6. Mr Vik is to file and serve any appellant's notice pursuant to CPR r52.12(2)(b) and CPR PD52D.9.1 by 4.30pm on 5 August 2022."
"Attendance at Court for further examination as to SHI's means of paying the Judgment Debt
1. Mr Vik is to attend Court to be examined by DBAG on the matters listed in paragraph 3 below (the Specified Matters) on a date or dates to be fixed, to be no less than [8 weeks] [10 weeks] from the date in paragraph 1.1 below.
1.1. That date is whichever is the later of:
(a) The [30 October 2022] [21 November 2022]; or
(b) in the event that an appeal is filed, the date of final determination of any such appeal.
2. Upon attending Court on the dates referred to in paragraph 1 above, Mr Vik is required to provide accurate answers, to the best of his knowledge and belief, to any questions as may be asked of him by DBAG or the Court in relation to the Specified Matters."
with 8 weeks and 30 October 2022 reflecting DB's position and 10 weeks and 21 November 2022 reflecting Mr Vik's position. Paragraph 5 of the draft Schedule provided for Mr Vik to provide the specified documents within 4 weeks of the date specified in § 1. Paragraph 6 provided for Mr Vik to provide a witness statement within 4 weeks (per DB) or 6 weeks (per Mr Vik) of the date specified in § 1.
"1. At the hearing on 15 July, the order made by the Court was to be substantially in the form of the Bank's draft, with certain amendments ordered by the Court or agreed. Counsel for the Bank indicated that there were outstanding amendments to be made to the drafting of paragraphs 5 and 6 of Schedule B to bring them in line with the form of paragraph 1, which paragraphs deal with the timetable for Mr Vik to produce further documents, etc. (Transcript p133, line 22 onwards).
2. The Bank's draft order provided (at paragraph 2, in square brackets) for a period of suspension ending 6 months after the determination of any appeal; however, paragraphs 1, 5 and 6 of Schedule B did not specify times within that period for Mr Vik to produce documents and a witness statement and to submit for further XX and these points were not addressed at the hearing.
3. Since the hearing, the parties have sought to agree the appropriate timeframes for Mr Vik to comply with the requirements referred to above. The parties are close to agreement and only a small difference remains in relation to timing.
4. The parties have agreed a formulation for fixing the time for compliance which differs from that provided for in the draft order: in return for Mr Vik agreeing to produce documents within only a very short time (4 weeks) after any appeal is concluded, the Bank has agreed in effect that the earliest possible date by which Mr Vik shall be required to produce documents is 4 weeks after Sunday 30 October (i.e. 27 November) – even if the appeal is determined before 30 October. The earliest dates by which Mr Vik may be required to produce a witness statement and submit for XX are also defined by reference to this 30 October date (respectively 4 weeks and 8 weeks after 30 October, i.e. 27 November and 25 December)."
Mr Vik proposed that the earliest dates by which he should have to produce documents, provide a witness statement and attend the Further Examination, however quickly his appeal might be determined, should be 19 December 2022, 2 January 2023 and 30 January 2023 respectively.
"The length of suspension is, in this case, somewhat notional. Unlike a case where the conditions and length of suspension is tied to the duration of a continuing obligation in the underlying order (e.g., the non-molestation order in Tanner v Hale [2000] 1 WLR 2377), the conditions of this suspension involve performance on one particular day, and therefore the fact that suspension is to last for six months should not slow down the timeline for compliance, especially given the extended period necessary for DBAG to ascertain the fullness and truthfulness of Mr Vik's compliance."
(4) The Suspended Committal Order
"…UPON the Court being satisfied so as to be sure that Mr Vik has been guilty of contempt of Court…
"AND UPON hearing Leading Counsel for DBAG and Leading Counsel for Mr Vik as to the matter of sentencing and other consequential matters…
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. Mr Vik be committed to Her Majesty's Prison Pentonville for a period of 20 months from the date of his apprehension, and that a Warrant of Committal shall be issued to that effect.
2. The committal of Mr Vik to prison under paragraph 1 above shall be suspended until whichever is the later of (i) a period of the date six months from the latest date by which any notice of appeal from this Order must be filed, or (ii) in the event of such notice of appeal being so filed, the date six months from the final determination of any appeal from this Order, and the warrant of committal remain in the Court Office at the Royal Courts of Justice, on the condition that Mr Vik complies with the terms set out in Schedule B to this Order, after which paragraph 1 of this Order and the Warrant of Committal shall be discharged unless prior to that date an application has been made by DBAG to lift said suspension.
3. Mr Vik pay DBAG's costs of this application on the indemnity basis, subject to detailed assessment. Mr Vik is to pay DBAG the sum of £1,200,000 by way of interim payment on account of such costs by 4pm on 12 August 2022.
4. Mr Vik has liberty to apply to the Court to purge his contempt and discharge the Order in paragraph 1 above.
5. Pursuant to CPR r81.9(3) personal service of this order shall be dispensed with. DB shall serve this Order on Mr Vik by way of email to his solicitors, Brecher LLP.
6. Mr Vik is to file and serve any appellant's notice pursuant to CPR r52.12(2)(b) and CPR PD52D.9.1 by 4.30pm on 5 August 2022."
…
"SCHEDULE B
TERMS OF SUSPENSION
The terms on which the committal in paragraph 1 of this Order and execution of the Warrant of Committal are to be suspended pursuant to paragraph 2 of this Order are as set out below.
Attendance at Court for further examination as to SHI's means of paying the Judgment Debt
1. Mr Vik is to attend Court to be examined by DBAG on the matters listed in paragraph 3 below (the Specified Matters) on a date or dates to be fixed, to be no less than 9 weeks from the date in paragraph 1.1 below.
1.1. That date is whichever is the later of:
(a) 14 November 2022; or
(b) in the event that an appeal is filed, the date of final determination of any such appeal.
2. Upon attending Court on the dates referred to in paragraph 1 above, Mr Vik is required to provide accurate answers, to the best of his knowledge and belief, to any questions as may be asked of him by DBAG or the Court in relation to the Specified Matters.
…
Provision of documents
…
5. Mr Vik is by no later than 4pm on the date 4 weeks after the date specified in paragraph 1.1 above to produce to DBAG's solicitors, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP, in hard and/or soft copy, all documents falling within the categories listed in paragraph 8 below (the Specified Documents).
6. Mr Vik is, by no later than 4pm on the date 5 weeks after the date specified in paragraph 1.1 above, to provide to DBAG a witness statement which must, to the best of Mr Vik's knowledge and belief: [requirements set out]"
(5) Appeal from the Suspended Committal Order and resulting deadlines
i) the Further Examination was to be listed on or after 28 April 2023, being (under §1.1 of Schedule B) the date no less than 9 weeks from the later of (a) 14 November 2022 and (b) 24 February 2023;
ii) the deadline for production of documents was 24 March 2023; and
iii) the deadline for provision of Mr Vik's witness statement was 31 March 2023.
(6) Listing of the Further Examination
(7) Mr Vik's Variation Application
"the Applicant asks the Court to vary the Order so as to extend the time for compliance … by 28 days. This would mean that the date for production of documents under paragraph 5 would become 21 April 2023 and the date for the provision of the statement under paragraph 6 would become 28 April 2023. The documents and the Applicant's witness statement would thus still be produced well in advance of the Applicant's attendance for further examination (on the basis that this is likely to be listed for September 2023) and the Applicant will respond to and assist with any reasonable further requests that the Respondent may make following its receipt of the documents and the Applicant's witness statement in the period leading up to his attendance for further examination."
"it will not before the Vik Evidence Hearing [i.e. the Further Examination] seek to have Mr Vik imprisoned on the basis that he has breached the condition in the Committal Order concerning the date on which he was required to produce all Specified Documents (as defined within the Committal Order)."
"we note your confirmation that DB will not seek, before the Vik Evidence Hearing, to have Mr Vik imprisoned on the basis that he has breached the condition in the Committal Order concerning the date on which he was required to produce all Specified Documents. On that basis, Mr Vik agrees that the Variation Application should be determined at the Vik Evidence Hearing."
(8) The Remote Attendance Applications
"12… on behalf of Mr Vik, it is submitted that, "The Committal Order does not require Mr Vik to attend the examination – it makes it a condition of the suspension of the sentence." I have to say that I do not follow that submission or the distinction which is sought to be drawn. It is indeed a "condition of the suspension of the sentence" and as the Committal Order expressly states at [2], "The warrant of committal remains in the Court office …on the condition that Mr Vik complies with the terms set out in Schedule B." Mr Vik is required to comply with the terms in Schedule B and one of those is, I am satisfied, that "Mr Vik is to attend Court", language which is mandatory in nature.
13. At some point in Mr Mathews' oral submissions, it appeared to be suggested that compliance with the terms of the Committal Order and attendance at the Further Examination was optional on the part of Mr Vik. I consider that that is contrary to the express language of the Committal Order and also the meaning and spirit of that Order.
14. The terms on which the Committal were suspended were precisely that, terms of the suspension, like any other terms of a suspended Sentence Order. The party concerned being ordered to undertake those requirements, whether in some cases (for example) unpaid work or a rehabilitation requirement, or in this case the provision of further documents and attendance at Court for Further Examination. Those are things that the Committal Order requires to be undertaken by Mr Vik.
15. It is noted on Mr Vik's behalf that DBAG seeks an order that, "Mr Vik shall attend the Vik examination hearing to be examined in person", and it is submitted that this would, "elevate a condition into a compulsion in a manner inconsistent with the basis of the suspension of the Committal Order." I again have difficulty with this submission. If, as it is, it is a condition of the suspension that Mr Vik attend Court for Further Examination, it is a condition that should be complied with. On any view, Mr Vik is under an obligation to attend for Further Examination (however that is done) otherwise he would be in breach of the suspension terms and liable to face an application for breach and an order for immediate imprisonment. Indeed, in criminal cases, alleged failures to comply with conditions of a suspended sentence order are frequently (and correctly) referred to as "breach" proceedings."
"95. Accordingly on the applicable principles, and for the reasons addressed above, I dismiss Mr Vik's Application. Conceptually that determines matters, as unless Mr Vik succeeded on the Vik Application and secured an order that he be permitted to attend by videolink he must attend in person.
96. I have already indicated my reasons why I consider under the Committal Order Mr Vik is required to attend at Court in person. However, had I been mistaken in my interpretation of the Committal Order that is in any event the consequence of my dismissal of the Vik Application.
97. Either way the DBAG Application, whilst properly brought, is not on the operative path and is academic. Nevertheless as it has been made, and for completeness, I will address it. The DBAG Application is for an order that pursuant to the Court's general case management powers under CPR 3.1(2)(c) Mr Vik be required to attend in person to be examined at the Further Examination hearing listed pursuant to paragraph [1] of Schedule B to the order Moulder J, dated 29 July 2022. If necessary, I am satisfied that I should make that order. The authorities that I have identified show that it is appropriate that a contemnor in a position of Mr Vik should attend in person and should be cross-examined in person in the context of the sentiments which have been expressed by both this Court and appellate Courts in the authorities that I have identified.
98. The circumstances are that the Further Examination forms part of a detailed set of conditions imposed by the existing Committal Order by which Mr Vik's term of committal was suspended. I am satisfied that the Court's ability to be in control of Mr Vik's evidence, and the likelihood of the truth and accuracy of his evidence being properly tested will be greatest if Mr Vik attends in person. I am also satisfied that it would be wrong to expose DBAG to the risks inherent in Mr Vik giving evidence remotely. Whilst it is true that the videolink proposals in the protocol are appropriate steps to take if videolink evidence was appropriate, there can be no guarantee that there would not be difficulties arising from the technology during the two days of the Further Examination.. Experience shows that notwithstanding the advances in technology over the years, there can still be problems with bandwidth and there can still be time lags, however short. Counsel, particularly enthusiastic Counsel, often ask questions quickly, and on occasions over speak a witness over a videolink where the same is not true, or is less likely to occur, when the witness is in person. Witnesses on occasions find the experience more difficult over a videolink with a degree of disconnect that is not there when everyone is in person. As is reflected in the Practice Direction (as already quoted above), remote evidence is inevitably not as ideal as having the witness physically in the Court and equally the degree of control the Court can exercise at a remote site is more limited than it can exercise over a witness physically present before it.
99. In any event, in circumstances where Mr Vik is an admitted contemnor, I do not consider that DBAG should be exposed to any risk of technological failure or exposed to potential shortcomings in the process due to any potential time lags, overlapping questions and answers or the like. These are all risks to which there is no reason why DBAG should be exposed, and which are avoided by Mr Vik giving evidence in person. Accordingly, I am satisfied that it is also appropriate to grant the DBAB Application pursuant to my general case management powers under CPR 3.1(2)(c) whereby Mr Vik's attendance at the Further Examination is to be in person. Accordingly, and for those reasons, the DBAG Application (whilst academic) also succeeds."
(9) Issue raised as to expiry of the suspended sentence
"3. The period of suspension of the sentence imposed by the Committal Order, namely six months from the final determination of Mr Vik's appeal from the Committal Order, ended on 24 August 2023. To the best of our knowledge, no application to lift the suspension of sentence was made by your client prior to that date. As such, the order for committal and the Warrant have now been discharged, pursuant to paragraph 2 of the Committal Order.
4. Subject to you identifying any reason to the contrary, it seems to us that the Committal Proceedings are now at an end and there is no reason for Mr Vik to attend for any further examination.
5. It appears to us that the parties should inform the Court of this fact as soon as possible so that the listing for the 19-20 September 2023, which is fast approaching, can be vacated."
"28. I confirm (without waiving privilege) that the point that the effect of the terms of the Committal Order meant that the period of suspension of Mr Vik's sentence had expired and the discharge of the order of committal and the warrant had taken effect on 24 August 2023 was not identified until only shortly before my firm wrote to Freshfields drawing attention to the point on 13 September 2023 and after the hearing before Mr Justice Bryan on 1 September 2023 (referred to below)."
(C) CONSTRUCTION OF THE SUSPENDED COMMITTAL ORDER
(1) Principles
"13. … the construction of a judicial order, like that of any other legal instrument, is a single coherent process. It depends on what the language of the order would convey, in the circumstances in which the Court made it, so far as these circumstances were before the Court and patent to the parties. The reasons for making the order which are given by the Court in its judgment are an overt and authoritative statement of the circumstances which it regarded as relevant. They are therefore always admissible to construe the order. In particular, the interpretation of an order may be critically affected by knowing what the Court considered to be the issue which its order was supposed to resolve.
14. It is generally unhelpful to look for an "ambiguity", if by that is meant an expression capable of more than one meaning simply as a matter of language. True linguistic ambiguities are comparatively rare. The real issue is whether the meaning of the language is open to question. There are many reasons why it may be open to question, which are not limited to cases of ambiguity.
15. As with any judicial order which seeks to encapsulate in the terse language of a forensic draftsman the outcome of what may be a complex discussion, the meaning of the order of the Court of Appeal in this case is open to question if one does not know the background. … the reference in the order to "the issue of damages", although necessary, begged the question "Which issue of damages?" The order does not itself answer it. Only extrinsic evidence can do that. The Proprietor accepts this. Mr Nelson's case was that it is admissible to consult the arbitrators' Terms of Reference to identify "the issue of damages" to which the order referred. But it appears to the Board that this concession, which was clearly rightly made, exposed the illogicality of the Proprietor's case. If it is admissible to construe an order of remission by reference to the issues in the arbitration, it cannot rationally be held inadmissible to construe it by reference to the issues which the remitting court regarded as calling for reconsideration by the arbitrators. …
16. Of course, it does not follow from the fact that a judgment is admissible to construe an order, that it will necessarily be of much assistance. There is a world of difference between using a Court's reasons to interpret the language of its order, and using it to contradict that language. The point may be illustrated by the decision of the Court of Appeal in England in Gordon v. Gonda [1955] 1 WLR 885, where an attempt was made to contradict what the Court regarded as the inescapable meaning of an order, by arguing that the circumstances described in the judgment could not have justified an order which meant what it clearly said. Therefore, it was said, the judge must have meant something else. The answer to this was that any inconsistency between the circumstances of the case or the reasoning of the Court and the resultant order was properly a matter for appeal. A very similar argument was rejected by the Board for the same reason in Winston Gibson v Public Service Commission [2011] UKPC 24 Decisions such as these (and there are others) are not authority for the proposition that a Court's reasons are inadmissible to construe its order. They only show that the answer depends on the construction of the order and that the reasons given in the Judgment may or may not make any difference to that."
"27. In a court order; one is concerned with the intention of the court in making the order, and this is closer to the exercise involved in construing the intention of the legislature when enacting a statute than it is to construing the intention of parties to a contract. On the other hand, it would be a rare and unusual case where a person to whom a statutory provision was to be applied (in a civil or criminal proceeding where the meaning of the statutory provision was at issue) had been involved in the drafting of that provision. But where a court order is to be applied to a person, such as Mr Feld, who had a hand in drafting the terms of the order, the court should be entitled to have regard, as part of the exercise of construing the order, to what that person could reasonably have been thought to have intended in drafting the order in a particular way, as far as that may be objectively determined on the basis of the evidence presented to the court.
28. The interpretation of a court order cannot be entirely assimilated to the exercise of interpreting a contract nor can it be entirely assimilated to the exercise of interpreting a statute. In all three cases, however, the common starting point is the natural and ordinary meaning of the words used in light of the syntax, context and background in which those words were used. What additional principles and factors come into play as part of the court's exercise of interpretation will depend on the nature of the writing to be interpreted (contract, court order or statute) and, of course, will be highly dependent on the facts of the specific case. In the context of statutory interpretation, Lord Reid pointed out in Cozens v Brutus [[1973] AC 854], and Lord Hoffmann in Moyna [Moyna v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2003] 1 WLR 1929 ], the importance of interpreting the natural and ordinary meaning of the words used in the relevant statute in light of the "syntax, context and background" in which those words were used (Moyna at [24], quoted by Dyson LJ In Evans [R v Evans [2004] EWCA Crim 3102] at [14]).
29. Dyson LJ, as already noted, confirmed in Evans that these observations also apply to interpretation of a court order. …"
(§§ 27-29)
"19. I further agree that orders of this kind are to be restrictively construed in accordance with Beatson LJ's strict construction principle [in the court below], which he described in this way in para 37:
"The third principle follows from the 'fundamental requirement of an injunction directed to an individual that it shall be certain': Z Ltd v A-Z and AA-LL [1982] QB 558 , 582 per Eveleigh LJ. It is that, because of the penal consequences of breaching a freezing order and the need of the defendant to know where he, she or it stands, such orders should be clear and unequivocal, and should be strictly construed: Haddonstone Ltd v Sharp [1996] FSR 767 , 773 and 775 (per Rose and Stuart-Smith LJJ); Federal Bank of the Middle East Ltd v Hadkinson [2000] 1 WLR 1695 , 1705C and 1713C-D (per Mummery and Nourse LJJ). In Anglo Eastern Trust Ltd v Kermanshahchi [2002] EWHC 1702 (Ch) Neuberger J stated:
'A freezing order, which has been referred to as a nuclear weapon, should … be construed strictly' because the court is 'concerned with an order which has a potentially draconian effect on the commercial and economic freedom of an individual against whom no substantive judgment has yet been granted'."
He added at para 66 that strict construction is also an aspect of the "great circumspection" with which Lord Mustill, in Mercedes Benz AG v Leiduck [1996] AC 284 , 297, stated that the jurisdiction should be exercised. I agree. One of the reasons for this principle, as I see it, is the risk of oppression."
"55. There is no doubt that a suspended committal order is an order which commits a person to prison. It orders that the person concerned 'be committed for contempt to prison' for the period specified. On the other hand, it does not result in the immediate imprisonment of the person concerned. A further order of the court is required. Unlike an immediate committal order, the refusal of habeas corpus, or a secure accommodation order, the person concerned is not immediately deprived of his liberty. It could be said, therefore, that the policy of the exception does not require an automatic right of appeal without the delay involved in having first to seek the permission either of the trial or the appeal judge. …
56. In other contexts, however, it has often been emphasised that a suspended sentence of imprisonment should always be regarded as a sentence of imprisonment. It should not, therefore, be imposed for an offence which is not serious enough to merit an immediate sentence. Nor should a suspended committal be for longer than the immediate term which would be imposed: see, eg, Hale v Tanner [2000] 2 FLR 879, CA at para 28. The reasons for this are obvious. There may well come a time when the court has to consider whether or not the terms of the suspension have been broken. If they have been broken, the court will be concerned with whether the suspension should be lifted and the committal served: see Re W(B)(An Infant) [1969] 1 All ER 594, CA. Although the court has a discretion whether or not to implement the committal, it will begin with a predisposition to do so once a breach of its terms has been proved, and it will not at that stage be concerned with whether the original committal order was correct. ...
57. Although a suspended committal does not immediately deprive the contemnor of his liberty, therefore, it hangs a sword of Damocles over his head which puts his liberty at much greater risk than did the order which he has been found to have breached. To the extent that there is any doubt about the meaning of the rules, it should be resolved in favour of the citizen whose liberty is thus put in jeopardy. ..."
(2) Application
i) Consistently with § 1 of the Suspended Committal Order and the purpose of the Order, § 2 plainly envisages that the suspension will continue until Mr Vik has had the opportunity to comply with the Schedule B conditions. If, as in fact occurred, the date for the Further Examination were listed outside the 6-month period identified in § 2, then the suspension would continue until the completion of that examination.
ii) That is why § 2 provides that the sentence and the warrant are discharged only "after" the conditions have been complied with ("after which…"), with "that date" in the final portion of § 2 referring to the date for compliance with the conditions.
iii) Were it otherwise, Mr Vik could simply evade a prison sentence and defeat the whole purpose of the order by listing his Further Examination after the 6-month period (as he in fact did). DB would be unable to avoid this result by applying within the 6-month period to lift the suspension, because Mr Vik would have the (irrebuttable) argument that he had not yet had the opportunity to comply so his sentence could not be activated. Such a result would be inconsistent with Moulder J's intentions, would undermine this court's authority and its coercive powers, and would be self-defeating by rendering the sentence impossible to activate if the Further Examination occurred outside the 6-month period.
iv) Schedule B makes provision for the earliest date on which the Further Examination could occur, but contains no longstop. Accordingly, the terms of Schedule B mean that the deadline for the final step in Mr Vik's compliance might not be known for some time and could depend (at least in part) on court availability, as well as on any possible extensions to the deadlines for Mr Vik to complete his disclosure exercise (such as the application Mr Vik in fact made).
v) The result for which Mr Vik is contending would be particularly egregious in this case given his conduct and representations. The Further Examination was listed for the convenience of Mr Vik's own counsel. Mr Vik delayed in producing disclosure and asked DB not to take a point on it. The parties have proceeded at all times on the basis that the suspension remained in force pending completion of the Further Examination, as considered later in the context of estoppel.
vi) Paragraph 2 of the order seeks to give Mr Vik (for his benefit, given that at the time it was made he intended to appeal) more rather than less time to comply, by providing for the 6-month period to run from the later of two dates, whichever is more beneficial to Mr Vik. The corollary of Mr Vik's current argument is that he would have benefitted from arguing for a shorter suspension period at the sentencing hearing, because his obligations would have expired earlier.
vii) Accordingly, § 2 must be read as providing for suspension for a period of time in which Mr Vik was granted the opportunity to comply with the Schedule B Conditions, "after which" the suspension ends.
"2. The committal of Mr Vik to prison under paragraph 1 above shall be suspended (and the warrant of committal remain in the Court Office at the Royal Courts of Justice) until whichever is the later of (i)a period ofthe date six months from the latest date by which any notice of appeal from this Order must be filed,;or(ii) in the event of such notice of appeal being so filed, the date six months from the final determination of any appeal from this Order,; or (iii) the date on which the further examination of Mr Vik directed pursuant to paragraphs 1 and 2 of Schedule B to this Order finally concludes (the "Relevant Date")and the warrant of committal remain in the Court Office at the Royal Courts of Justice, on the condition that Mr Vik complies with the terms set out in Schedule B to this Order,.after which paragraphParagraph 1 of this Order and the Warrant of Committal shall be automatically discharged after the Relevant Date unless prior to that date an application has been made by DBAG to lift said suspension."
(D) APPLICATION UNDER THE SLIP RULE
(1) Principles
"40.12— Correction of errors in judgments and orders
(1) The court may at any time correct an accidental slip or omission in a judgment or order.
(2) A party may apply for a correction without notice."
"The court has an inherent power to vary its own orders to make the meaning and intention of the court clear."
"In his opinion the addition now asked for was not one that could be made under the slip rule. That rule was intended for the correction of an order which, as drawn up, did not express that which was decided by the Court. It was quite possible that an order in the terms now asked for might have been made if an application had been made at the time, but no such application was made."
Aldous LJ referred to this too as "an attempt to amend an order after second thoughts" (Bristol-Myers § 20).
"As far as I am concerned, as I say, I did not intend … that there should be this exceptional order for payment of costs at once, but that costs should be in any event those of the successful appellant. That was the order I intended to pronounce and I thought I had done so. But I see there is some room for mistake owing to the fact that after I had made the observation which showed I did not intend an immediate taxation, an application was made which could have had that result and was so interpreted by the associate. I think that is a slip and I think it is a slip which can be amended under RSC Ord. 20, r. 11, because inadvertently the order as drawn did not express the intention of the court owing to a misunderstanding between the associate and the court which pronounced it …."
(quoted in Bristol-Myers § 21)
"The High Court Slip Rule (RSC 0.20.r.11) which is similarly worded, was considered only recently by this Court in R v. Cripps ex parte Muldoon [1984] 1 QB 686. We there pointed out the width of the power, but also drew attention to the fact that it does not enable the Court to have second thoughts (p.697).
It is the distinction between having second thoughts or intentions and correcting an award or judgment to give true effect to first thoughts or intentions, which creates the problem. Neither an arbitrator nor a judge can make any claim to infallibility. If he assesses the evidence wrongly or misconstrues or misappreciates the law, the resulting award or judgment will be erroneous, but it cannot be corrected either under s. 17 or under o. 20, r. 11. It cannot normally even be corrected under section 22. The remedy is to appeal, if a right of appeal exists. The skilled arbitrator or Judge may be tempted to describe this as an accidental slip, but this is a natural form of self-exculpation. It is not an accidental slip. It is an intended decision which the arbitrator or Judge later accepts as having been erroneous."
Robert Goff LJ having considered the authorities said this at page 195:
"In none of the last five cases I have cited did the judgment or order as drawn fail to give effect to the intention of the Court at the time when it was drawn. In each case there was, however, an error in the judgment or order arising from an accidental slip or omission — by a party, or by his Counsel, or by his solicitor. Furthermore, there is authority that if a Court makes an order in certain words which do not have the effect which the Court intended them to have, that order may be corrected under the slip rule to make it accord with the Court's actual intention: see Adam & Harvey Ltd v International Maritime Supplies Co-ordination drawings Ltd [1967] 1 WLR 445 ."
and:
"I do not think it would be right for me to attempt in this judgment to define what is meant by "accidental slip or omission": the animal is I suspect, usually recognizable when it appears on the scene."
(quoted in Bristol-Myers §§ 22-24)
"25 Those cases establish that the slip rule cannot enable a court to have second or additional thoughts. Once the order is drawn up any mistakes must be corrected by an appellate court. However it is possible under the slip rule to amend an order to give effect to the intention of the Court. ...
26 In the present case the only issue raised on the cross-appeal was whether the restriction placed by the judge was appropriate. At no time was that part of the judge's order that required Bristol Myers to pay the defendants' costs challenged and it was not the intention of this Court to alter that part of the order. The intention of this Court was to remove the restriction; not to alter the general right to costs that had been ordered. Thus the correct order allowing the cross-appeal should have left the part of the order of the judge which was not challenged in the form in which it existed.
27 I reject Mr Turner's submission that the mistake was as to the legal effect of the order. The legal effect was not in issue. In my view the terms of the order did not meet the intention of the Court contained in the judgments and that had an unexpected legal effect. The order setting aside the whole of the judge's order on costs was an accidental slip which can and should be corrected under r.40.12. The intention of the Court was to vary the judge's order so as to remove the restriction."
"In my judgment, the phrase in the President's order, "making any further application" taken without reference to her judgment is ambiguous. It could mean (1) making a fresh application — for example a further, but new application to set aside the order of 12 December 1994; or (2) making a further application to the court in an outstanding application already before the court. Coleridge J's order clears up that ambiguity. He thought "further application" meant any application, as the President's judgment makes clear. In my judgment, that is the correct view. …" (§ 56)
citing Bristol-Myers for the proposition that:
"Although it is of course the case that the "slip rule" is primarily designed to correct typographical or grammatical errors, it is permissible to use it to use it to amend a court order to give effect to the intention of the court …" (§ 57)
"The slip rule allows the court to correct an "accidental" error or omission. Was the form of the cross-undertaking an accidental error? At first blush the answer must be "No". It was a cross-undertaking deliberately given in the form in which it was intended to be given. It was embodied in an order settled by junior counsel for each party; and approved by the judge." (§ 63)
Floyd J noted that one ground on which Lewison J refused to correct the order was that it was not clear what order would have been made if the alleged "accidental slip" had not occurred (Leo Pharma § 16).
"17. It is important to note that it is not every failure of an order to give effect to the intention of the court which can be corrected under the rule. The operation of the rule is limited to accidental slips or omissions. It is common for the court to encourage parties to agree matters of detail in the drawing up of its order with the proviso that the parties may mention the matter again to the court in the event of disagreement. Whilst in such circumstances it could be said that the court had no specific intention at the time it spoke its order, a subsequent agreement as to the form of order would plainly be within the intention of the court, and such an agreement could not, as it appears to me, be corrected under the slip rule. There is neither a failure to reflect the intention of the court, nor any accident or slip. Another quite common case is where the parties agree to a minute of order which is inconsistent with an order spoken by the judge: for example a longer period of time than the judge allowed for some act to be performed. A party who had agreed such a variation cannot seek to revert to the original time on the basis that it had not been the intention of the court to extend the time. There is no accidental slip or omission in the order.
18. Counsel for Sandoz suggested that the answer to this is that matters of detail such as this could be worked out between the parties, but that it was not open to the parties to include a new matter of substance which is not part of the intention of the court. I reject that submission. Matters deliberately included by the parties in an order drawn up and sealed by the court do not constitute accidental slips or omissions within the rule. It is different where, as in Bristol Myers , the order had an unexpected and unintended effect inconsistent with the court's intention.
…
21. Neither side accordingly suggests that the court had a definite intention at the hearing to make an order about the precise rate or period of interest. The stay of the financial remedies was dealt with globally, and without the dispute about the rate and period of interest being brought to my attention as requiring resolution.
22. Putting aside for the moment what is said to be the mistake in agreeing to the order, I do not think that the order as made is inconsistent with the intention of the court at any stage. Firstly, when the order was spoken, the precise form of order about interest was one of the matters to be settled between counsel, and was, at least on the face of it, so settled. The case is therefore not within the principle enunciated in Bristol Myers where the order had an unintended effect inconsistent with the court's intention. Secondly, there would on this scenario be no accidental slip."
"33. The position in this case is different from that discussed by Floyd J. The slip rule is used to deal with errors and omissions that result from "accidents" on the court's own part as well as those of the parties. In the example given by Floyd J of the parties agreeing a longer time than the judge had allowed, such an agreement is so common that it would be implicit in the judge's order that he was content for the parties to agree adjustments of this kind: it was "within the intention of the court", even though the court had "no specific intention at the time it spoke its order". There would therefore be no accident on the part of the judge in endorsing the parties' agreement. But here my judgment did not invite the parties to agree what they saw fit in light of it, but asked for the assistance of counsel to draft an order to give effect to the judgment. I did not give the parties licence to agree that the court should make an order that did not do so. It is commonplace for a judge to seek such assistance of counsel. For my part, I do not think that counsel are then always acting as agents for the parties: for example, on occasions counsel might assist even though the client has withdrawn instructions. I acknowledge that in this case Mr Dunning referred to discussions between the parties, but I do not think that much can be read into that. In any case, I endorsed the relevant part of the order on the basis that it gave effect to my judgment, and I cannot accept that, if through the parties' agreement it did not do so, therefore there was no "accidental slip or omission" within the meaning of CPR 40.12 .
34. However, I am not satisfied that there was any relevant slip or omission for another reason. My intention was to dismiss all the claims in the four actions before me that had not been stayed except only in so far as I made an order for relief on them. As I see it, my order did give effect to that intention.
35. My order did not, however, deal specifically with the possibility, which had not occurred to me, that the parties believed that the monetary relief claims were not stayed and that there were therefore claims in the proceedings that had not been advanced during the trial. If I had appreciated that the parties believed this, I would, I think, have included some words in my order to the effect that, if and in so far as they were not covered by the stay, they were dismissed. I am not persuaded that the slip rule in CPR 40.12 is designed to cover this situation, or that it should [be] so used. But should I spell this out using the inherent power referred to in CPR 40 BPD4.5 (and of which the slip rule may [be] seen simply as a specific aspect: Zuckerman on Civil Procedure (3rd ed, 2013) para 23.34)? ...
36. Nevertheless, I have concluded that it would be proper to use the inherent jurisdiction to clarify the position about the consequential monetary relief claims. As I see it, the purpose and effect of doing so is … to prevent the litigation, and in particular the order of 10 December 2010, hampering the arbitral process because it gives room for the parties to dispute the meaning effect of paragraph 6."
(2) Application
i) Moulder J might have taken the view that the sentence should not remain extant for longer than 6 months, so the Further Examination would have to be listed within that period, giving the matter whatever degree of expedition was appropriate from a listing perspective in order to achieve that;
ii) The judge might have selected a suspension period longer than 6 months;
iii) The judge might, alternatively, have considered that the Further Examination could be listed for any date after the expiry of the 6-month period, with the sentence remaining extant but suspended meanwhile;
iv) The judge might have taken the view indicated in (ii) above, but only on the basis that the Further Examination was listed within a finite period (e.g. 3 months) after the expiry of the 6-month period;
v) The judge might have taken the view indicated in (ii) above, but only on the basis that that all possible efforts were made to list the Further Examination promptly (that being a formulation adopted by DB, in oral reply submissions, as an approach the judge would likely have taken);
vi) On either of alternatives (iii), (iv) and (v) above, the judge might have ordered that the sentence would remain extant but suspended up to and including the date of the Further Examination itself (as DB's draft rectified order envisages), or until a date some weeks/months after that, (in order to allow DB whether, in the light of the course of the Further Examination, to issue an application to lift the suspension, and to prepare the application). Thus, for example, § 3 of DB's draft order (reflecting § 5 of its application notice), sought pursuant to DB's variation application, would provide that:
"The suspension pursuant to paragraph 2 of the Committal Order of the committal of Mr Vik to prison under paragraph 1 of the Committal Order shall be continued (subject to Mr Vik's compliance with the same terms) so as to end on the date 3 months after the date on which the Further Examination (including, for the avoidance of doubt, any adjourned hearing of the Further Examination) finally concludes."
DB submits that that would reflect "Moulder J's intention in setting up the carefully engineered regime to encourage and coerce Mr Vik into complying with the Part 71 Order and affording DBAG an opportunity to consider Mr Vik's attempts to comply and decide whether to seek to activate the sentence".
(E) CORRECTION OR VARIATION OF THE ORDER UNDER CPR OR INHERENT POWERS
i) the court has a discretion to vary its orders, to be exercised in all the circumstances, whether to vary an order. The discretion is primarily exercised where (a) there has been a material change of circumstances since an order was made or (b) the facts on which the original decision was made were (innocently or otherwise) misstated: Tibbles v SIG Plc [2012] 1 WLR 2591 §§ 39-42. The Court of Appeal in Tibbles added that "it ought normally to take something out of the ordinary to lead to variation or revocation of an order, especially in the absence of a change of circumstances in an interlocutory context" (§ 39(vii)). There may be room of for prompt recourse to a court to deal with a matter that in genuine error was overlooked by the parties and the court, and "[o]n that basis, the power within the rule would not be involved in order to give a party a second bite of the cherry, or to avoid the need for an appeal, but to deal with something which, once the question is raised, is more or less obvious, on the materials already before the court" (§ 41); and
ii) the present case meets the requirement for a material change of circumstances. At the time the Suspended Committal Order was made, the court and the parties assumed that the court would have availability to accommodate a listing of the Further Examination within 6 months from the date on which Mr Vik's appeal was dismissed. Some 9 months after the Suspended Committal Order was made, the factual position was quite different to that assumption, not least as the 6-month period stretched into the summer vacation. That is a sufficient basis for the court now to vary § 2 of Moulder J's order. There would be no prejudice to Mr Vik, who until very recently was content to proceed on the basis that he was subject to an obligation under the Suspended Committal Order to attend a Further Examination in September 2023.
i) When a sentence is varied (which may be done either by the court of its own motion or on an application by the contemnor to purge), the original sentence cannot be varied by way of increase; only variation by amelioration of the sentence is possible: Harris v Harris [2001] EWCA Civ 1645 § 19. In determining whether a variation would be permissible as an amelioration, this "should be self-evident and almost irrefutable" (Harris § 22). The variation sought by DB would self-evidently be an increase in Mr Vik's sentence and therefore cannot be granted.
ii) In any case, it seems highly doubtful whether CPR 3.1(7) applies to give any power to vary the Suspended Committal Order. In accordance with its words, the rule gives the court power to amend only orders made in exercise of a power given by the CPR: see Deg-Deutsche Investitions-und Entwicklungsgesellschaft mbH v Koshy (No.2) [2004] EWHC 2896 (Ch) §§ 10 and 17-21; White Book 2023 note 3.1.17.4. Given that the power to commit a contemnor (and to suspend an order for committal) is part of the court's inherent jurisdiction (Lee v Walker [1985] 1 QB 1191H-1192C; Deutsche Bank AG v Sebastian Holdings Inc (Nos 1 and 2) [2018] EWCA Civ 2011 § 35) rather than a power given by the CPR, CPR 3.1(7) does not confer jurisdiction to depart from the usual rule that a court of first instance has no power to review, revoke or vary an order made by another first instance court.
iii) DB's further application for continuation of the suspension so as to end 3 months after the Further Examination must fail for the same reasons as given: (a) there appears to be no jurisdiction for the court to vary a sentence on the application of a party other than the contemnor; and (b) any variation must reduce the sentence – the court cannot increase it.
"… However no one is liable to be sentenced twice for the same contempt nor can the original sentence be varied by way of increase. Much of the argument before us has turned upon whether the judge's order of 14 June constituted a variation of an existing sentence or the imposition of a fresh sentence and whether, if a variation, it was a variation by way of amelioration. …"
"22. .. it cannot in my opinion be said with any certainty that the order represents a variation of the original sentence rather the imposition of a fresh penalty. Certainly RSC Ord 52 as presently framed suggest to me that the only power to suspend is the power to suspend the execution of the first order of imprisonment. The court's choice is only between warrant to be immediately executed or a warrant to be suspended. That choice is made at the sentencing hearing and does not recur. Furthermore even if the order of 14 June could be accepted as a variation of the order of 23 March I am by no means clear that it is a variation by way of amelioration. Whilst on the one hand I recognise the argument that a reduction of two months and eight days on a sentence of five months must be counted a significant amelioration (and Mr Harris must so have regarded it since that was what he sought in the alternative) a balance still has to be struck between the element of amelioration and the price paid by imposition of the Damoclean sword throughout a period of future liberty. The principle that variation must be by way of amelioration is important and in my judgment amelioration should be self-evident and almost irrefutable. Of course it would be possible to contrast extremes such as an immediate release ordered early into a long sentence balanced by a suspended sentence of brief duration for a limited period and an immediate release well into the original sentence balanced by a suspension for an indefinite period. Although Mr Harris in this case was not in doubt as to his preference it is easy to postulate the hypothetical contemnor who would prefer to serve his term in order to achieve unconditional liberty." (§ 22, my emphasis)
"It follows that Ms Percy had no legal justification for going on to the ministry's land to remove the notices and she was, therefore, in breach of the injunctions against her. It follows also that she is in breach of the terms on which Lloyds J's sentence was suspended. I have therefore to consider both whether it is appropriate to activate that sentence, and what, if any, further punishment should be imposed in respect of the present breaches." (p.743g)
"[After referring to various extenuating circumstances] The position is therefore different from that which faced Lloyd J. In these circumstances, I do not think it would be just simply to activate the suspended sentence, or otherwise to impose an immediate custodial sentence. In view of Ms Percy's limited means, I do not see any purpose in imposing a fine, although there will, no doubt, be an application for at least some part of the costs in respect of these proceedings. What I propose to do is to extend the period of the suspended sentence, so that the 12 months will run from the date of this judgment, and the suspended sentence will remain at six months." (p.744d)
(F) ABUSE OF PROCESS AND COLLATERAL ATTACK
(1) Principles
"81. The first and short answer to this argument is that it was open to the Orb Parties to take the point before Cooke J and they failed to do so. None of the material relied on has come to their attention subsequently ... There has been no significant or material change of circumstances.
82. That is fatal to this ground for discharge: see Chanel Ltd v FW Woolworth & Co Ltd [1981] 1 WLR 485. Mr Drake emphasised that that case involved a consent order. But the principle is well established, and often applied, in relation to contested interlocutory hearings. It is that if a point is open to a party on an interlocutory application and is not pursued, then the applicant cannot take the point at a subsequent interlocutory hearing in relation to the same or similar relief, absent a significant and material change of circumstances or his becoming aware of facts which he did not know and could not reasonably have discovered at the time of the first hearing. It is based on the principle that a party must bring forward in argument all points reasonably available to him at the first opportunity; and that to allow him to take them serially in subsequent applications would permit abuse and obstruct the efficacy of the judicial process by undermining the necessary finality of unappealed interlocutory decisions." (§ 82)
"78. An abuse of process may also arise where, in all the circumstances, a party is misusing or abusing the process of the court by bringing a claim or raising a defence in later proceedings which should have been raised in earlier proceedings: Johnson v. Gore-Wood at p 31.
79. This form of abuse of process, like the collateral attack doctrine, involves a broad, merits-based judgment which takes into account the public interest (that there should be finality in litigation, that a party should not be vexed twice in the same matter, and economy and efficiency in the conduct of litigation), the private interests of the parties, and also takes account of all the facts of the case."
(2) Application
i) The very point that Mr Vik now seeks to make, viz that he is no longer required to attend the Further Examination, was fought and lost by him at the hearing before Bryan J. That battle turned on true construction of the Suspended Committal Order and the mandatory nature of the conditions that Mr Vik attend the Further Examination.
ii) Mr Vik was obliged at the hearing before Bryan J to raise any and every argument available to him that he wished for the court to consider in determining the question whether he was required to attend the Further Examination. The argument he now advances was plainly open to him at that hearing, which took place after the date that he now contends marked the end of the suspension. There has been no significant change in circumstance and no facts that Mr Vik has become aware of that he could not reasonably have known or discovered at the time of the hearing before Bryan J.
"UPON the Court having found Mr Alexander Vik ("Mr Vik") guilty of contempt of Court in failing to comply with paragraphs 1 and 2 of the Order of Teare J dated 20 July 2015 made under CPR Part 71 and having sentenced Mr Vik to a term of committal of 20 months by paragraph 1 of the Order of Moulder J dated 29 July 2022 (the "Committal Order") suspended pursuant to paragraph 2 of the Committal Order and subject to Mr Vik's compliance with the conditions set out in Schedule B to the Committal Order ("Schedule B")
AND UPON Mr Vik being required under paragraph 1 of Schedule B to attend Court on a date or dates to be fixed to be examined by the Claimant on the matters listed in paragraph 3 of Schedule B (the "Vik Examination Hearing") and being required at the Vik Examination Hearing under paragraph 2 of Schedule B to provide accurate answers, to the best of his knowledge and belief, to any questions on such matters as may be asked of him by the Claimant or the Court
AND UPON the Vik Examination Hearing being listed for 19 and 20 September 2023
AND UPON the Claimant's application by notice dated 19 May 2023 (the "DBAG Application") seeking an Order pursuant to CPR 3.1.2(c) that Mr Vik be required to attend in person to be examined at the Vik Examination Hearing
AND UPON Mr Vik's application by notice dated 23 June 2023 (the "Vik Cross-Application") for an Order under CPR 32.3 granting Mr Vik permission to attend the Vik Examination Hearing remotely by video-link from Connecticut, USA
…
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. The Vik Cross-Application is dismissed.
2. For the avoidance of any doubt, Mr Vik is required to attend the Vik Examination Hearing in person.
3. Mr Vik shall pay the Claimant's costs of the DBAG Application and the Vik Cross-Application, such costs being summarily assessed on the indemnity basis in the sum of £83,900.
AND UPON Mr Vik's application for permission to appeal against the decision to dismiss the Vik Cross-Application and grant the DBAG Application (the "PTA Application")
AND UPON the Court considering that the PTA Application was totally without merit
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED THAT:
4. Permission for Mr Vik to appeal against the dismissal of the Vik Cross-Application and the grant of the DBAG Application is refused.
5. The PTA Application is dismissed as totally without merit."
(G) ESTOPPEL
i) DB shared with Mr Vik a common assumption of fact or law borne out by clear words or conduct between them;
ii) DB relied in its mutual dealings with Mr Vik on the common assumption, knew that Mr Vik shared the assumption and was strengthened, or influenced, in its reliance by that knowledge;
iii) Mr Vik (objectively) intended, or expected DB to rely on the assumption so as to have assumed some responsibility for it; and
iv) DB has suffered detriment or Mr Vik has benefited because of DB's reliance such that it would be unjust/unconscionable to allow Mr Vik to depart from the assumption.
"Once there is in fact an actual tenancy to which the Act applies, the protection of the Act follows and we do not see how, consistently with Johnson v. Moreton [1980] A.C. 37 , the parties can effectively oust the protective provisions of the Act by agreeing that they shall be treated as inapplicable. If an express agreement to this effect would be avoided, as it plainly would, then it seems to us to follow that the statutory inability to contract out cannot be avoided by appealing to an estoppel. The terms of section 2(1) are mandatory once the factual situation therein described exists, as it does here, and it cannot, as we think, be overridden by an estoppel even assuming that otherwise the conditions for an estoppel exist: see, for instance, the somewhat similar though not wholly analogous position under the Rent Acts: Welch v. Nagy [1950] 1 K.B. 455. We agree with the judge that, having regard to the purpose of the Act of 1948, it cannot be said to be unconscionable for the tenant who is protected by it to rely upon the protection which the statute specifically confers upon him. Once the protection attaches, the jurisdiction to grant possession is exercisable only subject to the statutory provisions and it is a little difficult to see how the parties can, by estoppel, confer on the court a jurisdiction which they could not confer by express agreement." (p261C-f)
i) an inter partes estoppel cannot operate so as to expand or contract the effect of a court order; and
ii) an estoppel cannot be used as a key element of a claim (sword not shield) and particularly it cannot operate to create a legal relationship when there was none at the outset (§ 103).
"36. I therefore believe that the terms of the order are clear. I can accept in principle that there may be cases where justice requires that the clear terms of an order be treated as having some different meaning in order to reflect the parties' common understanding, presumably (though this was not much explored in submissions) on the basis of an estoppel. I would, however, be cautious about going down that route except in a clear case. Orders will often have to be interpreted and enforced by parties (or advisers) or judges who were not present when they were made, and they ought to be capable of being understood without recourse to any other materials. But even on the most liberal approach I do not see that what was said at the two DJ hearings, or the Appellants' failure clearly to take a point about impecuniosity and duration in the first Counter-Schedule, could justify reading into the debarring order a qualification which is not there on its face. ..." (§ 36)
(H) AGREEMENT TO VARY THE COMMITAL ORDER
"(3) Where a rule, practice direction or court order –
(a) requires a party to do something within a specified time, and
(b) specifies the consequence of failure to comply,
the time for doing the act in question may not be extended by agreement between the parties except as provided in paragraph (4).
(4) In the circumstances referred to in paragraph (3) and unless the court orders otherwise, the time for doing the act in question may be extended by prior written agreement of the parties for up to a maximum of 28 days, provided always that any such extension does not put at risk any hearing date."
(I) EFFECT OF BRYAN J ORDER
"UPON the Court having found Mr Alexander Vik ("Mr Vik") guilty of contempt of Court … and having sentenced Mr Vik to a term of committal of 20 months by paragraph 1 of the Order of Moulder J dated 29 July 2022 (the "Committal Order") suspended pursuant to paragraph 2 of the Committal Order and subject to Mr Vik's compliance with the conditions set out in Schedule B to the Committal Order ("Schedule B")
AND UPON Mr Vik being required under paragraph 1 of Schedule B [to the Suspended Committal Order] to attend Court on a date or dates to be fixed to be examined by the Claimant on the matters listed in paragraph 3 of Schedule B (the "Vik Examination Hearing") …"
(J) CONCLUSION