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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> First Rate FX Ltd v Trading By Telephone Ltd & Ors [2014] EWHC 1838 (QB) (16 April 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/1838.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1838 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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FIRST RATE FX LTD | Claimant/Respondent | |
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TRADING BY TELEPHONE LTD & ORS | Defendants/Applicants |
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8th Floor, 165 Fleet Street, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7421 4036 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR C CHALLENGER (instructed by James Chan & Co) appeared on behalf of the Second Defendant
The Defendants, MR OLIVER DAVIS-GARDNER, MR DANIEL CRISP, MR SCOTT GUNN, MR BOBBY WARD, and MR BILLY MARTIN appeared in person
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Crown Copyright ©
"The defendants shall serve and file their defences by 4pm on Friday 21 March 2014."
At paragraph 12 of my order I directed that the parties give standard disclosure by list by 4pm on Friday 4 April 2014. At paragraph 13 of my order I directed that inspection shall take place at the same time that standard disclosure is given by the parties, providing to each other copies of the relevant documents other than pleadings, applications, orders and inter-solicitor correspondence or documents already exhibited to statements or affidavits in these proceedings.
"1. The order of Master Eastman dated 14 April 2014 be set aside.
2. The Mishcon defendants [by which Wilkie J meant the original Mishcon defendants and Mr Crisp] do comply forthwith with their obligations for disclosure and inspection.
3. Unless the Mishcon defendants do provide disclosure as required by standard disclosure by 4pm on 9 April 2014 the defences of the Mishcon defendants do stand struck out.
4. Unless the Mishcon defendants do provide inspection by 4pm 11 April 2014 the defences of the Mishcon defendants do stand struck out."
Then there was a provision about costs and a provision permitting the defendants to apply to vary or set aside the order.
"Unless the second defendant does provide specific disclosure and inspection by no later than 4pm on 17 April 2014 of the items set out in the claimant's email dated 10 April 2014 timed at 16.21 the defence of the second defendant be struck out."
"I have had the documents numbered and listed below, but they are no longer in my control.
(1) All emails in my personal account with the domain @firstrate.com or responding to the search term "first rate", which were deleted on or around 25 February 2014;
(2) The contents of my laptop computer, which was left in a repair shop in Dubai United Arab Emirates on or around February 2014 and which I believe has been destroyed or being sold for parts, such that it is no longer in my possession or control."
"... must deliver up to the claimant's solicitors by no later than 4pm 19 February 2014 all property belonging to the claimant, including any confidential information which is in the defendant's possession. If any such property or confidential information exists only in computer readable form, the defendant must cause it to be printed out or copied onto an electronic medium and given [to] the claimant's solicitors.
4. The defendant must delete all confidential information from any computer discs, tapes or other reusable material in the claimant's possession or under his control and destroy all other documents and tangible items in his possession or under his control which refer to or contain any confidential information by no later than 4pm 19 February 2014."
"130. I was referred to two authorities – Realkredit Danmark v York Montagu reported in Westlaw at [1998] WL 104421 and Re Atrium [2013] EWHC 2882.
131. Realkredit involved the dismissal of a claim for failure to comply with an "unless order" for discovery. A list was provided within the relevant time but it was alleged to be deficient. At first instance it was held that the list was woefully inadequate. There was no evidence that satisfied the judge that it had been undertaken in careful fashion and large gaps remained. Accordingly he held there was a failure to comply with the "unless order" and struck the case out. The Court of Appeal allowed the appeal. A number of passages from the judgment of Toulson LJ show the basis of the decision:
There was nothing unclear about the order made in this case, in that it required service of a list of documents. But a list was served so, prima facie , the order was complied with. Interestingly there is no reported case of an action being struck out as a result of a list being incomplete. But there is in the much litigated field of Further and Better Particulars where, in Reiss v Woolf [1952] 2 QB 557, at pages 559–560, the Court of Appeal approved a passage from the judgment of Devlin J who said:
"So construed, 'default' refers to default in the delivery of a document within the specified time. I do not, of course, mean that any document with writing on it will do. It must be a document made in good faith and which can fairly be entitled 'particulars'. It must not be illusory; … That is the test, in my judgment, and not as the plaintiff contends, whether each demand for particulars has been substantially met."
… In the present case the court was only concerned with whether the unless order had been complied with. The lenders had conceded that the valuers' affidavits would have justified the making of an order for specific discovery. But no such order was sought or made. Had the judge been asked to make such an order he would have had to consider in relation to each category of documents identified in the application the arguments about relevance and necessity which are deployed at length in the skeleton arguments for this appeal and were deployed before the judge.…
Applying the language of Reiss v Woolf , I think the lenders' list could fairly be described as a list. It was not illusory. It would still be a list even if a subsequent application for specific discovery had elicited further documents. So I think the judge was persuaded to adopt the wrong approach and applied the wrong test to the valuers' application to dismiss the claim and therefore his decision cannot stand. This was not simply an exercise of the judge's discretion. In my judgment if he had approached the question he had to decide in the way I think he should have done he would have decided that the lenders had complied with the unless order.
I do not think that the conclusion I have reached will mean that unless orders for discovery are worthless. In many cases where they are made no list is served at all. Both counsel conceded, rightly in my judgment, that a court could infer lack of good faith where it was obvious from patent deficiencies in the list that it had been prepared in apparent but not real compliance with the obligation to give discovery.
132. Re Atrium involved an unless order in relation to an unless order requiring the liquidators to conduct a search for documents falling within CPR 31.6 by a specified date. In the course of his judgment Birss J referred to a classification of the authorities by Counsel which he did not, in the end find helpful. In paragraph 30 he referred to the decision in Realkredit and pointed out it had been followed in two subsequent Court of Appeal cases. In paragraph 31 he explained Realkredit thus:
There the Court held that since a list had been served, prima facie the relevant order had been complied with. The remedy, if a party is dissatisfied with a list already provided, was an application for further disclosure. The question of compliance with the court order was not simply an exercise of the court's discretion. In the case before the court the list provided could not be called illusory.
133. In paragraphs 33 and 40 he made the point that in order to determine if there is a breach one needs to determine exactly what the order requires the party to do. He had to consider whether the liquidators had carried out a reasonable search. This could be done on inference but the deficiencies would have to be so significant that it could be said that a reasonable search had not been carried out."