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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> ABC v Google LLC [2019] EWHC 3020 (QB) (14 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/3020.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3020 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ABC |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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Google LLC |
Defendant |
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Mr J. Scherbel-Ball (instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 4 November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE PUSHPINDER SAINI :
This judgment is divided into 4 parts as follows:
I. Overview - paras. [1-6]
II. The Claim and Procedural History - paras. [7-29]
III. The Application - paras. [30-41]
IV. Conclusion - paras. [42-47]
I. Overview
II. The Claim and Procedural History
"When the Claimant serves the claim form on the Defendant, he must serve a copy which shows his full name and address and a copy which is anonymised as aforesaid together with a copy of this order."
(i) It was "a remarkable state of affairs that [the Claimant had] managed to get to August [2018] when not complying with an order of the court"; and(iii) The provision of the Claimant's name "has already been ordered once by the court to be provided together with the address. The Claimant is going to comply with that order, and, if he does not, his claim is going to be struck out. The court is not in a position to progress this claim fairly and to dispose of it fairly until that information is provided."
III. The Application
(a) "relief from sanctions of the order of Nicklin J dated 24.8.18";(b) "to allow right to pursue pending applications to vary or revoke paragraph 4 of the anonymity order, on which the sanctions order relied";
(c) "request for judgment in default of acknowledgment of service or defence"; and
(d) "substantive claim; and to prevent injustice."
(i) set aside the orders made by Master Yoxall and Nicklin J; and
(ii) to reargue that the Defendant's Acknowledgment of Service is invalid, which is not only obviously wrong, but has already been rejected by McGowan J on 12 November 2018.
(a) Paragraph 6: "[paragraph 4 of the Order of Master Yoxall] inadvertently requires that the name and address of the Claimant be disclosed to the Defendant in circumstances where doing so would inevitably harm the very interests of the Claimant the order protects and the Claimant is seeking to protect."(b) Paragraph 7: "paragraph 4 of the anonymity order provides that the identity of the Claimant be disclosed to the Defendant, who has not only refused to disclose the identity of the anonymous poster of the offending materials, but automatically transfers details of court cases to the Lumen database….in the circumstances, there is a real risk of reposting the offending materials, thereby rendering the anonymity order meaningless and stifling the claim."
(c) Paragraph 11: "In any event, since the anonymity order was made, there has been a material change of circumstances. The Defendant has failed to file a valid acknowledgment of service or defence and is therefore in default. It is believed that as a result, the Defendant is not entitled to defend the claim and privileged personal information of the Claimant required by the paragraph 4 of the order."
(d) Paragraph 12: "These and other concerns reveal the conflicting requirements of paragraph 4 of the anonymity order, causing the Claimant to make applications for variation or revocation of the paragraph."
(e) Paragraph 26: "As mentioned previously, paragraph 4 of the order is subject to pending applications for variation or revocation. It neither stipulates any timescale for compliance, nor provides any adequate safeguards against arbitrary abuse of the Claimant's rights and violation of the anonymity order".
(a) The Claimant's breaches of the requirements of the Orders of Master Yoxall and Nicklin J are self-evidently serious and significant. In considering the "seriousness and significance of a breach", it is also necessary for the court to look at the underlying breach which led to the making of the unless order: see British Gas Trading Ltd v Oak Cash & Carry Ltd [2016] 1 WLR 4530 at [39] per Jackson LJ.
(b) The disclosure requirements imposed by the Orders of Master Yoxall and Nicklin J are fundamental for the proper conduct of these proceedings. Instead, the claim has failed to progress at all, but has resulted in voluminous correspondence and applications from the Claimant and an inordinate amount of public resources and judicial time being incurred without any progress in the claim.
(c) In this regard, the observations of Lord Neuberger in Global Torch Ltd v Apex Global Management Ltd (No.2) [2014] 1 WLR 4495 at [23] – [25], emphasising the importance of compliance with court orders, are important:
"[23] The importance of litigants obeying orders of court is self-evident. Once a court order is disobeyed, the imposition of a sanction is almost always inevitable if court orders are to continue to enjoy the respect which they ought to have. And, if persistence in the disobedience would lead to an unfair trial, it seems, at least in the absence of special circumstances, hard to quarrel with a sanction which prevents the party in breach from presenting (in the case of a claimant) or resisting (in the case of a defendant) the claim. And, if the disobedience continues notwithstanding the imposition of a sanction, the enforcement of the sanction is almost inevitable, essentially for the same reasons. Of course, in a particular case, the court may be persuaded by special factors to reconsider the original order, or the imposition or enforcement of the sanction.
[24] Further, it is difficult to have much sympathy with a litigant who has failed to comply with an unless order, when the original order was in standard terms, the litigant has been given every opportunity to comply with it, he has failed to come up with a convincing explanation as to why he has not done so, and it was he, albeit through a company of which he is a major shareholder, who invoked the jurisdiction of the court in the first place.
[25] One of the important aims of the changes embodied in the CPR and, more recently, following Sir Rupert Jackson's report on costs, was to ensure that procedural orders reflected not only the interests of the litigation concerned, but also the interests of the efficient administration of justice more generally..."
(d) There is no good reason why the default has occurred. The Claimant's reasons are irrelevant to his failure to comply and without merit.
IV. Conclusion