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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 >> London Borough of Lambeth v AM [2020] EWHC 1680 (QB) (29 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/1680.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1680 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
LONDON BOROUGH OF LAMBETH |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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A.M. |
Defendant |
____________________
The Defendant appeared in person.
Hearing date: 23 June 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE PEPPERALL:
BACKGROUND
THE DISCLOSURE APPLICATION
6.1 Category 1: All records of direct communications between Lambeth and HJ containing the direct or transcribed statements made by HJ.
6.2 Category 2: All records of direct communications between Lambeth and HJ containing any other direct or transcribed statements by HJ.
6.3 Category 3: All records of internal communications between Lambeth's social workers, team leads or other employees which contain or reference or render interpretations or opinions as to the meaning or any intent of any part of HJ's allegations.
6.4 Category 4: All records of communications between Lambeth and third parties which contain or reference or render interpretations or opinions as to the meaning or any intent of any part of HJ's allegations.
6.5 Category 5: The complete and unredacted social care record held by Lambeth in databases or other filing systems in respect of LM, AM and AM's wife.
6.6 Category 6: All documents relating to Lambeth's assessment, evaluation and decision-making and documents in response to the subject-access requests made by AM on 28 May and 27 October 2018.
6.7 Category 7: All documents relating to Lambeth's assessment, evaluation and decision-making and documents in response to AM's 18 December 2018 complaint and in relation to the processing of his 8 February 2019 complaint to the Information Commissioner's Office ["the ICO"].
6.8 Category 8: Copies of the employee records of a number of Lambeth employees, including for each his or her (a) detailed job description; (b) CV with qualifications and employment history; (c) training record; (d) disciplinary or complaint record; and (e) start and end dates of employment.
6.9 Category 9: All records of communications between Lambeth and third parties (including AM's general practitioner, the NHS Trust and the ICO) in which Lambeth made representations regarding AM in relation to its investigation of HJ's allegations or of his various complaints.
7.1 She found, at [29], that documents in categories 7 and 9 relating to AM's complaint to the ICO and the ICO's criminal prosecution of AM were not relevant to the pleaded issues. In so finding, she observed that His Honour Judge Freedman QC had struck out the counterclaim.
7.2 She observed, at [30], that category 8 comprised a wide range of confidential information concerning the authority's employees. Such information was in any event not relevant.
7.3 She remarked, at [32], that Lambeth had taken "a very generous approach to disclosure" and that much of the material was disclosed despite being "at the margins of relevance." She accepted, at [33], Lambeth's argument that, with the limited exceptions where Lambeth had refused disclosure on grounds of relevance, it had already disclosed all of the documents that it had within its control.
7.4 Further, she accepted, at [35], that Lambeth was entitled to claim privilege in respect of communications between its external solicitors and HJ.
THE APPLICATION FOR A STAY
Mosaic files for AM and his wife
Audit log
Documents relating to the subject-access request and complaint to the ICO
Lambeth's litigation conduct
DISCUSSION
The issues
19.1 First, was the redacted information confidential?
19.2 Secondly, did AM receive the information in circumstances of confidentiality?
19.3 Thirdly, did AM use the information in breach of confidence by, for example, sending a pre-action letter to HJ?
19.4 Fourthly, if so, were AM's actions in the public interest, because HJ's identity was not in fact confidential and/or because her allegations were made maliciously and in bad faith?
20.1 That Lambeth's investigation of HJ's allegations was unlawful because "it failed in numerous and significant ways to comply with the relevant Government guidance in the London Child Protection Procedure."
20.2 That the authority's social workers engaged in unlawful conduct by the falsification of AM's records.
20.3 That Lambeth failed to comply with its statutory duties to investigate AM's complaint in respect of the conduct of its employees.
20.4 That Lambeth unlawfully withheld subject data to which AM was entitled.
20.5 That Lambeth unlawfully refused to respond to or investigate AM's complaint of data breach made on 18 December 2018 and, further, that it refused to comply with the ICO's instructions and its own statutory obligations.
"The Defendant submits that any harm which may have been incurred by 'the Council' would be entirely due to its gross, several and manifest failures as alleged by the Defendant in this defence. The Defendant maintains that the Claimant's conduct falls far below the acceptable standards for public bodies and these failures represent a danger to the public interest. The Defendant also submits that the Claimant has had multiple opportunities, sign-posted by the Defendant, to mitigate its liabilities, but has and continues to respond in an unethical and unlawful manner."
The appeal
26.1 First, orders for specific disclosure can never be demanded as of right. Rule 31.12 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 is framed in permissive terms that the court "may" make an order for specific disclosure. It is well established that in determining an application pursuant to r.31.12, the court is exercising a discretion.
26.2 Secondly, a court will only order disclosure where it is satisfied that the documents sought are, or have been, in the other party's control and they are relevant to the pleaded issues in the case.
26.3 Thirdly, the court will usually treat a party's statement that it does not have further documents to disclose as conclusive. If relevant, such assertion can be challenged through cross-examination at trial, but absent evidence that the party has conducted an inadequate search or that its disclosure statement is not honestly made, the court will not usually order further disclosure.
26.4 Fourthly, appellate courts should not lightly interfere with a judge's decision upon a matter of case management. Since the deputy master was here exercising a discretion, the appeal court will only entertain an appeal if she erred in law, took into account matters that she should not have taken into account, overlooked other relevant matters or reached a decision that was perverse. This is a high threshold.
26.5 Fifthly, paragraph 4.6 of PD52A provides:
"Where the application is for permission to appeal from a case management decision, the court dealing with the application may take into account whether–
(a) the issue is of sufficient importance to justify the costs of an appeal;
(b) the procedural consequences of an appeal (e.g. loss of trial date) outweigh the significance of the case management decision;
(c) it would be more convenient to determine the issue at or after trial.
Case management decisions include … decisions about disclosure …."
30.1 I entirely understand why AM suspects that Lambeth might hold files in respect of him and his wife. There is, however, no basis for going behind the authority's disclosure statement that there are no such files. AM can of course explore this issue further in cross-examination at trial but, upon the material shown to me, the deputy master was right to dismiss the application for disclosure of files that Lambeth has confirmed do not exist.
30.2 While AM seeks a computer-generated audit log in respect of LM's Mosaic file, the authority has disclosed a case history recording activity on the file. That is sufficient in the absence of any pleaded issue as to the falsification or manipulation of the file. In so far as AM asserts that the entries in the file are inconsistent with recordings that he has made of contact with Lambeth, then he already has the material to cross-examine the authority's social workers.
30.3 The fact that AM might be entitled to, or have been promised, further documents as part of his subject-access request or his complaint to the ICO is not relevant. The purpose of disclosure in these proceedings is in order to ensure the fair and efficient trial of the pleaded allegations, not to allow the court to conduct a public inquiry into Lambeth's conduct generally or its compliance with its legal obligations under the Data Protection Act 2018 and the General Data Protection Regulation 2016.
30.4 The deputy master was also undoubtedly right to find that Lambeth was entitled to claim privilege in respect of communications between its external solicitors and HJ. AM's submission that litigation privilege cannot be claimed in public-interest proceedings under the Children's Act 1989 is not in point. These are not care proceedings in respect of LM but ordinary Queen's Bench proceedings alleging a breach of confidence. The usual rules of privilege are not abrogated simply because this claim arises out of the authority's public-law duties in respect of children in its area.
30.5 I entirely agree with the deputy master's conclusions at paragraph 34 of her judgment that:
a) AM's wider allegations of misconduct in the course of this litigation would only be relevant if they persuaded the court that Lambeth was deliberately withholding further disclosure; and
b) it was neither appropriate nor possible for the deputy master to try such allegations upon the papers.
30.6 Upon the material before her, the deputy master was entitled to conclude that she could not be satisfied that the allegations of misconduct were merited or that, in any event, they would assist her in determining the disclosure application.
Conclusion