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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> S -v- S (Application to Prevent Solicitor Acting) [2017] EWHC 2660 (Fam) (24 October 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2017/2660.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2660 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ZS |
Applicant |
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- and- |
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FS |
Respondent |
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Philip Marshall QC & Charlotte Hartley, (instructed by Hughes Fowler Carruthers) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 23rd-24th October 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
(14.00 pm)
Ruling by Mr Justice Williams:
The background to the application.
The application.
"2. Raymond Clive Tooth and Sears Tooth solicitors be barred forthwith from further acting for the petitioner in these proceedings and/or any related or ancillary proceedings arising out of the dissolution of the marriage between the petitioner and the respondent.
"3. Sears Tooth solicitors do forthwith take steps to remove themselves from the record as acting for the petitioner.
"4. Pending determination of the application Raymond Clive Tooth and Sears Tooth solicitors be barred from taking any further step on behalf of the petitioner in these proceedings.
"5. Raymond Clive Tooth and/or Sears Tooth solicitors do jointly and severally pay the costs of and incurred in making this application on an indemnity basis."
The law.
(a) the duties arising in confidentiality and legal professional privilege arise whether the information is imparted to a solicitor directly by a principal, or by an agent on behalf of his principal. It would therefore apply to any confidential information or legally privileged material which arose between Raymond Tooth and OE.
(b) the duty arises whether the parties formally entered into a legal relationship or not. The imparting of information in contemplation of such a relationship would suffice. Thus a preliminary meeting between solicitor and client in the course of a beauty parade could suffice, probably even if pro bono or not charged for.
(c) the rules apply in family cases just as much as in civil actions. There is no absolute rule though that a solicitor cannot act in litigation against a former client.
(d) in the first instance it is a matter for the solicitor involved to consider whether, consistent with his professional conduct rules and the proper administration of justice, he can continue to act. If he concludes he cannot, that will usually be the end of the matter. If he concludes he can continue to act then the Court retains the power to grant an injunction to prevent him from acting.
(e) where a former client has imparted information in confidence in the course of a fiduciary relationship, and /or where that information is privileged, there are strong public policy reasons rooted in the proper administration of justice which support the approach that a solicitor in possession of such information should not act in a way that might appear to put that information at risk of coming into the hands of someone with an adverse interest.
(f) it must be established that the confidential or privileged information is relevant or may be relevant to the matter on which the solicitor is now instructed by the person with an adverse interest to that of the former client.
(g) where it is established that a solicitor is in possession of such confidential and/or privileged information, the Court should intervene to prevent the information coming into the hands of anyone with an adverse interest, unless there is no real risk of disclosure. Once it is established that a person is in possession of such information the burden is on them to show that there is no such real risk. In this context "real" means it is not merely fanciful or theoretical, but it does not need to be substantial.
(h) the risk of disclosure may arise from deliberate act, inadvertent disclosure or unconscious influence or subconscious influence. In the latter case in particular it might be quite fact specific whether that risk arises or not.
(i) in the context of family litigation it is hard to conceive of a situation where the risk of disclosure would not satisfy that test where the Court had concluded that detailed, confidential financial information and/or privileged information had been disclosed to a solicitor by one party to a marriage which was, or might be relevant to a potential dispute between them. In most cases that would create a real risk where that solicitor was subsequently instructed by the other party.
(j) a party advancing such an application may decline to waive privilege or confidentiality, or may elect to partially waive privilege. If he partially waives privilege the Court may order full disclosure in relation to that transaction in order to determine an issue such as an application for an injunction like this, and the Court may take steps to ensure that the privilege is not waived for all purposes, but to ensure that the cat can be put back into the bag. In cases such as this the question should be considered at the directions stage, in particular where, as here, partial disclosure in the form of the attendance note has been made.
(k) if the principles on which an order can be made are established an order should usually be made, unless it is established that there are other more significant public policy reasons for not granting it, including that the Court concludes that the injustice to the respondent in granting the order outweighs the injustice to the applicant in not granting it. Relevant considerations might include, firstly, whether the information had been imparted during an exercise designed either wholly or in part to conflict out other solicitors who the respondent might seek to instruct; whether there are other firms who might now be able to act for the respondent; whether the application was made promptly; the additional expense and delay that might be occasioned to the respondent if they were obliged to instruct new solicitors; whether any such expense could appropriately be off-set by the applicant.
The issues.
This hearing.
The parties' positions on the issues and the evidence.
Chronology
DOB H. Now lives in Switzerland | |
DOB W. Lives in England | |
1995 | Parties marry |
Child 1 born | |
Child 2 born | |
Child 3 born | |
2006 | H says parties were divorced in Russia. W alleges H obtained fraudulent divorce in Russia. |
22 Feb 2013 | H obtains copy of Certificate of Divorce |
2014 | W and two children move to England [B58][B78] |
21 Feb 2015 | H has child with new partner and conceals arrival from W. |
21 Oct 2015 | H or OE first consults HFC |
17 Nov 2015 | OE and H's Russian lawyer meets with HFC Charles Russell Farrer |
23 Nov 2015 | H signs letter of retainer with HFC |
30 Nov 2015 | OE attends appointment with Sandra Davis of Mishcon De Reya Lady Ward of Stewarts Law OE has appointment with RT OE's account is set out in his Statement and his Reply and his oral evidence. I shall not repeat it now but will return to it when I reach my conclusions below Raymond Tooth's account is in his witness statement and oral evidence. |
Beginning 2016 | Stresses in children's relationship with W [B78, #6] |
Feb 2016 | H's Russian lawyer contacts a well known childrens' lawyer at Dawson Cornwell |
Mar 2016 | Children meet lawyer unknown to W |
Mar 2016 | W meets RT and KE. |
15 Aug 2016 | Translation of Divorce obtained. Produced by H [B59] |
Sep 2016 | W and H meet [B79 |
26 Sep 2016 | Wife issued a Divorce Petition (behaviour) in the central Family court. Her solicitors were ST |
Dec 2016 | W learns of Child 4's birth. |
Feb 2017 | H takes boys to Swiss school without telling W [Judgement #5] |
20 Feb 2017 | ST wrote to HFC asking whether they acted for H. |
21 Feb | HFC responded saying that H was shocked because his representative had met with RT on 30 November at which the name of the H was disclosed along with asset values. HFC asked for confirmation that RT would cease to act. [B8] |
23 Feb | ST reply stating that there was a meeting scheduled with OE but RT has not note of any such meeting, nor was any bill delivered, and he has no record of what was discussed at that meeting. RT notes that they always ask for identification documents and none exist. RT states having seen his client and taken instructions nothing emerged which led him to consider he had been consulted by or on behalf of H. |
9 Mar | HFC-ST: " I attached a copy of OE's contemporaneous note of the advice which you gave at a meeting which you concede was scheduled to take place on 30 November 2015. OE has a very clear recollection that meeting and in particular of the fact that your assistant Natasha Slabas attended that meeting. " Seeks confirmation of withdrawal by 13 March failing which an application would be issued together with an application for costs against RT personally. ST-HFC: Can you let me have an attendance note redacted but only to show the date, the time who attended on both side and when the meeting ended. |
15 March | HFC-ST: There is no other attendance note… the meeting lasted between 30-40 minutes. The meeting was attended by OE on his side and you and your assistant Natasha Slabas on your side. .. I repeat that OE has a very clear recollection of the meeting and of the fact that both you and your assistant Natasha Slabas took notes. OE has provided me with full details of what was discussed and it is apparent that it was much more than a perfunctory first meeting. H served with Petition [B44] |
23 Mar | HFC file Acknowledgment re Petition: Asserts already divorced and disputes W's HR |
30 Mar | ST-HFC: Pointing out the Note does not state the date, the time and the people in attendance. Repeats there is no evidence the meeting took place and observes that it is clear that what OE says is untrue. |
Mar 2017 | H issues WON application for Easter contact. Children see DC. |
3 Apr 2017 | H issues application for LTR |
12 Apr 2017 | Notary Public certifies obtaining of translations of Russian language document. [B64] |
13 Apr 2017 | Answer to Petition filed: Asserts parties already divorced and seeks declaration of validity pursuant to s. 46 FLA 1986 |
25 April 2017 | DC meet child (W/o W's knowledge) |
8 May 2017 | Application for CMH |
21 Jun 2017 | DJ MacGregor. Transfer of suit and declaration to HC (leading to hearing before Roberts J on 22 June) |
Aug 2017 | H does not abide by agreement reached before PJJ as to summer holiday division [B79, #9] |
14 Sep 2017 | Mr Justice Peter Jackson gives judgment on LTR application. H given permission to remove the children. Critical of H's deception of M over his new child [#5] 'shabby' 'betrayed W's trust' Order for costs (£150k out of 271k) made against H given his reprehensible behaviour which has fed into the way the proceedings arose, were pursued and conducted. |
Analysis and findings.
The absence of contemporary records or evidence of advice given.
Corroborative witnesses.
Analysis and Conclusions.