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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 >> Halborg & Anor v Halborg & Ors [2022] EWHC 1621 (QB) (23 June 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2022/1621.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1621 (QB) |
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Appeal Nos: QB-2021-000180, QA-2021-000222, QA-2021-000223, QA-2021-000231, QA-2021-000240, QA-2021-000258, QA-2021-000270, QA-2021-000292, QA-2022-000027 And QA-2022-000041 & QA-2022-000051 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LUTON & OXFORD
DECISIONS OF HHJ BLOOM & HHJ CLARKE
CLAIMS F00LU431 & G01LU395
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) Scott Halborg (2) Halborg Limited |
Claimants/ Appellants |
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- and – |
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(1) Albert Halborg (2) Eileen May Halborg (3) More 2 Life Limited |
Defendants/ Respondents in Claim F00LU431 |
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And Between: |
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(1) Scott Halborg (2) Halborg Limited |
Claimants/ Appellants |
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- and – |
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(1) Hollingsworths Solicitors Limited (2) Gregory Hollingsworth (3) Stephen Taylor |
Defendants/ Respondents in Claim G01LU395 |
____________________
Stephen Taylor (instructed by Hollingsworth Solicitors) for Defendant/Respondent 1 &2 Claim F00LU431
Michael Ashdown (instructed by Deals & Disputes Solicitors) for Claimant/Appellant 1 & 2
Benjamin Wood (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for Defendant/Respondent 1 &2
Andrew Nicol (instructed by Mills & Reeve) for Defendant/Respondent (3)
Claim: G01LU395
Hearing dates: 09-10 June 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Cotter:
Introduction
"the sheer volume of material before the Court – and the number and extent of the issues sought to be raised by the applications – makes it impossible to identify what is strictly necessary to have pre-read and what else can safely be disregarded unless it is referred to during the course of submissions."
History of the underlying disputes
Orders being appealed:
Appellant Notice 1 – QA-2021-000180
1. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 6th July 2021 in the Lawyers' Claim and 7th July 2021 in the Trust Claim.
2. Limited Civil Restraint Orders made by Her Honour Judge Bloom on 6th July 2021 and issued by the Court on 12th July 2021 ("LCRO") against the two Claimants in both claims.
Appellant Notice 2 – QA-2021-000222
3. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 9th September 2021 in the Trust Claim.
4. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 9th September 2021 in the Lawyers' Claim.
Appellant Notice 3 – QA-2021-000223
5. General Civil Restraint Order made by Her Honour Judge Clarke on 14th September 2021 ("GCRO") against the First Claimant in both claims.
Appellant Notice 4 – QA-2021-000231
6. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 4th October 2021 in both claims.
7. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 29th September 2021 in the Trust Claim.
Appellant Notice 5 – QA-2021-000240
8. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 11th October 2021 in the Trust Claim.
9. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 12th October 2021 in the Lawyers' Claim.
Appellant Notice 6 – QA-2021-000270
10. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 26th October 2021 in both claims.
11. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 2nd November 2021 in the Trust Claim.
12. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 11th November 2021 in both claims.
13. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 12th November 2021 in both claims.
Appellant Notice 7 – QA-2021-000258
14. Order of Her Honour Judge Clarke made on 20th October 2021 in both claims.
Appellant Notice 8 – QA-2021-000292
15. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 3rd December 2021 in both claims.
Appellant Notice 10 – QA-2022-000041
16. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 27th January 2022 in the Trust Claim.
Appellant Notice 11 – QA-2022-000051
17. Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom made on 10th February 2022 in the Trust Claim.
Relevant legal principles to be applied to the permission applications
The test for permission
"(1) Except where rule 52.7 applies, permission to appeal may be given only where—
(a) the court considers that the appeal would have a real prospect of success; or
(b) there is some other compelling reason for the appeal to be heard.
(2) An order giving permission under this rule or under rule 52.7 may—
(a) limit the issues to be heard; and
(b) be made subject to conditions.
(Rule 3.1(3) also provides that the court may make an order subject to conditions.)"
Case management appeals
"Appeal in relation to case management decision
4.6 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 significance 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."
"I accept without reservation, that this Court should not interfere with case management decisions made by a judge who has applied the correct principles, and who has taken into account the matters which should be taken into account and left out of account matters which are irrelevant, unless satisfied that the decision is so plainly wrong that it must be regarded as outside the generous ambit of the discretion entrusted to the judge."
Totally without merit ("TWM") orders
"The scope for general guidance is limited: adjectives and phrases of the kind "bound to fail", "hopeless" and "no rational basis" are, we hope, helpful, but they are necessarily imprecise…"
"23.12 If the court dismisses an application (including an application for permission to appeal or for permission to apply for judicial review) and it considers that the application is totally without merit –
(a) the court's order must record that fact; and
(b) the court must at the same time consider whether it is appropriate to make a civil restraint order.
Civil restraint orders ("CROs")
"(a) The court's jurisdiction for making civil restraint orders (CROs) is well established. Any Judge can make a limited civil restraint order in circumstances where the party against whom the order is made persists in issuing claims or making applications which are totally without merit.
(b) In the case of a considering whether to make a civil restraint order and, if so, what form of order to make, there are three questions for the court;
(i) whether the litigant has persistently issued claims or made applications which are totally without merit (the Threshold Issue);
(ii) whether an objective assessment of the risk which the litigant poses demonstrates that he will, if unrestrained, issue further claims or make further applications which are an abuse of the court's process (the Exercise of Discretion); and
(iii) what order, if any, it is just and proportionate to make to address the risk identified (the Appropriate Order)."
Limited Civil restraint Order ("LCRO")
"2.1 A limited civil restraint order may be made by a judge of any court where a party has made 2 or more applications which are totally without merit.
2.2 Where the court makes a limited civil restraint order, the party against whom the order is made –
(1) will be restrained from making any further applications in the proceedings in which the order is made without first obtaining the permission of a judge identified in the order;
(2) may apply for amendment or discharge of the order provided he has first obtained the permission of a judge identified in the order; and
(3) may apply for permission to appeal the order and if permission is granted, may appeal the order.
…
2.8 Where a party makes an application for permission under paragraphs 2.2(1) or 2.2(2) and permission is refused, any application for permission to appeal –
…
(2) will be determined without a hearing."
And
"2.9 A limited civil restraint order –
(1) is limited to the particular proceedings in which it is made;
(2) will remain in effect for the duration of the proceedings in which it is made, unless the court otherwise orders; and
(3) must identify the judge or judges to whom an application for permission under paragraphs 2.2(1), 2.2(2) or 2.8 should be made."
General Civil restraint order ("GCRO")
"4.1 A general civil restraint order may be made by –
…
(3) a Designated Civil Judge or their appointed deputy in the County Court,
where the party against whom the order is made persists in issuing claims or making applications (emphasis added) which are totally without merit, in circumstances where an extended civil restraint order would not be sufficient or appropriate."
Fee remission
Chronology
27th March 2019 | Trust Claim issued |
21st May 2020 | The Claimants apply to adjourn the hearing of the CCMC listed on 8th July 2020 in the Trust Claim by at least 2 months. I was told by the Defendants (Respondents to the current applications for permission) that in breach of CPR 39.8(1), the Claimants did not tell the Defendants that they had so applied. Consequently, the CCMC was adjourned to be heard on 11th September 2020. |
4th August 2020 | The Claimants applied to adjourn the hearing of the CCMC listed on 11th September 2020 in the Trust Claim by at least two months. I was told that as before, and in another breach of CPR 39.8(1), the Defendants were not told about that second application to adjourn. Consequently, the CCMC was adjourned to be heard on 6th January 2021. |
18th December 2020 | Lawyers' Claim issued. |
31st December 2020 | Lawyers' Claim served. |
6th January 2021 | Hearing of CCMC in the Trust Claim could not go ahead (for lack of a judge at the listed time). At 13:13hrs on 5th January 2021, the Court relisted the CCMC to 28th January 2021 at 2pm, via MS Teams. The first Claimant replied by e-mail, sent some six-minutes later, stating that the Claimants could not attend on 28th January 2021 due to child-care issues and a trial in London on 29th January 2021 |
28th January 2021 | Order made by DDJ Willink including directions. The Claimants did not attend the hearing on 28th January 2021, nor did they appoint an agent to attend (counsel, solicitor or solicitor's agent). There is a dispute as to whether two telephone calls were made by the Judge to the Fust Claimant the beginning of the hearing ( the First Claimant does not accept that they were). On the evidence before him DDJ Willink came to the conclusion that the Claimants' applications to adjourn were to be dismissed. He also concluded that those applications (in the plural) were TWM. It is submitted by the Respondents that he was clearly and unarguably right to do so. It is also submitted that the Claimants' given reasons for non-attendance on 28th January 2021 were not good reasons for the following reasons: a. The Claimants had three weeks' notice of the hearing on 28th January 2021. That is plenty of time to make arrangements for childcare, or for counsel's or an agent's attendance. b. The home-schooling and childcare responsibilities were obviously being overplayed. This was a two-hour, on-line hearing which could have been attended, at least for the purpose of the applications to adjourn. It was disclosed during the hearings before me that the First Claimant's partner was at home on maternity leave. c. There was no good reason for not appointing counsel or an agent. Deputy District Judge Willink's conclusion, on the evidence before him, was that, as a matter of fact, the Claimants had no good reason for not attending. Permission to appeal was not sought. |
1st February 2021 | Order of DJ Spink extending time for service of the defence in the Lawyers' Claim. |
16th February 2021 | Order of DJ Spinks in part an unless order in relation to the payment of fees by the Claimants and extending time. |
23rd February 2021 | Order made by District Judge Gill consolidating the Trust Claim and Lawyers' Claim and listing all existing applications for 6th July 2021 |
6h July & 7th July 2021 | Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom in both the Trust Claim and Lawyers' Claim. This followed the hearings on 6th July and 7th July. |
The 6th/7th July hearings
"I said earlier that in 40 years of both being at the bar and being a full-time judge for a number of these years, I do not think I have ever come across a claimant, particularly a claimant who is a lawyer, making eight applications, all of which are withdrawn or not proceeded with on the day of the hearing. Four of them were made within the space of ten days in February and four of them were made in the space of about the same time in March. All of them were listed today and, as I say, none of them proceeded with."
1. 9th February (Lawyers' Claim) – Application for judgment in default against the Solicitor Defendants with costs. Her Honour Judge Bloom dealt with this application at paragraphs 24-27 of her judgment.
2. 15th February (Lawyers' Claim) - This was an application to set aside DJ Spinks' order of 1st February and to give judgment in default of defence.
3. 18th February (Lawyers' Claim) - Application to set aside DJ Spinks order of 16th February although the first Claimant had paid the outstanding fees.
4. 19th February (in respect of fees) - This application was to set aside an order made by an unnamed "Court officer" dated 12th February 2021. This application initially may have had some merit but when the first Claimant continued to pursue it had lost all merit.
5. 4th March 2021 - An application to set aside part of the order dated 23 February 2021 made by District Judge Gill so that two applications were decided immediately. At paragraphs 70 and 71 of her judgment Her Honour Judge Bloom noted at the hearing on 6th July 2021 the first Claimant wanted these applications put back.
6. 12th March 2021 – An application to set aside the order made by an unnamed "Court officer" dated 3rd March 2021.
7. 19th March 2021 - This application was to set aside the order dated 11th March 2021 which purportedly listed the 4th March application for hearing on 6th July 2021.
"44. He is also a solicitor of the court and he knows the pressure that courts are under, particularly during the Covid pandemic, and the idea that he generally believed that all these applications were going to be listed before six July is, it seems to me, unrealistic. There is an element of abuse of process here and it is extremely concerning to see a solicitor doing this and Mr Halborg needs to be very careful about the applications he makes.
45. This is the sort of behaviour that one sees from litigants in person. Mr Halborg is an officer of the court and I would expect him to recognise that in the applications he makes and to be more measured. But more importantly having made applications on 4th, 12th, 15th and 19th to relist everything and to move it, it was obvious, that the court was simply going to list it for today. Therefore, to keep making applications as he did on the 15th and 19th served no purpose.
46. Even more so, again, none of the applications were withdrawn. They were all technically before the court and it was only when counsel notified the court threw his skeleton argument that it became aware that these other four applications, of course, had become otiose. I do not consider that any of those applications would have had merit."
2nd August 2021 | The application of the Solicitor Defendants and Barrister Defendant for an Unless Order following the failure of the Claimants to pay the costs on account by 27th July 2021. |
21st August 2021 | An application by the first Claimant seeking permission under the CRO to make an application for extension of time for payment of costs ordered on 6th July 2021. The application was made in each claim. The first Claimant lodged a further application for permission seeking an order that the CRO did not apply to the Trust Claim. |
24th August 2021 | Permission granted by Her Honour Judge Bloom for the first Claimant to make an application for extension of time for payment of costs only. Hearing set down for 15th September 2021 along with the Solicitor Defendants' and Barrister Defendant's application of 2nd August 2021. |
8th September 2021 | Application by the first Claimant seeking permission under the CRO to make an application to discharge the CRO in the Trust Claim to be heard on 15th September 2021. |
9th September 2021 | Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom in the Trust Claim refusing permission to challenge the effect of the LCRO noting that there was a right of appeal. The application was marked as TWM. |
9th September 2021 | Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom in the Lawyers' Claim refusing permission to discharge the CRO. |
14th September 2021 | GCRO made by the Designated Civil Judge Her Honour Judge Clarke. |
15th September 2021 | Hearing before Her Honour Judge Bloom in respect of costs orders made on 6th and 7th July. Judgment to be handed down on 4th October 2021. |
29th September 2021 | Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom in the Trust Claim refusing permission to the Claimants for (1) an application to amend/stay costs orders made on 7th July 2021; (2) an application to increase the costs budget; (3) an application for separate trial of the counterclaim; and (4) an application for extension of time to file witness statements. |
4th October 2021 | Order made by Her Honour Judge Bloom and the handing down of judgment. |
Hearing of 4th October
12th October 2021 | Order of Her Honour Judge Bloom. The Claimants ordered to pay £18,400.00 to the Solicitor Defendants and £7,200.00 to the Barrister Defendant. |
25th October 2021 | Application for recusal of Her Honour Judge Bloom in both the Trust Claim and Lawyers' Claim. |
3rd December 2021 | Hearing before Her Honour Judge Bloom of the recusal application. |
Hearing of 3rd December
1. favoured barristers;
2. was hostile towards the first Claimant because he had brought a claim against his parents;
3. had already concluded a view as to first Claimant's credibility;
4. was rude;
5. awarded indemnity costs against him;
6. chose and reserved the case to herself;
7. was hostile towards the first Claimant because of help with fees;
8. employed the improper use of CROs;
9. was acting in concert with the DCJ;
10. gave an unreasonably short time (3 weeks) to prepare an application;
11. had weaponised the recusal application;
12. was procedurally unfair;
13. was unduly upset by criticisms of Court staff;
14. was using costs to stifle a claim; and
15. was rushing the Claimants
10th February 2022 | Hearing before Her Honour Judge Bloom in the Trust Claim of the Defendants' application for an unless order. |
1. The Claimant must, by 4.00pm on 24 February 2022, comply with paragraph 2(b) of the Order dated 11th October 2021.
2. In default of paragraph 1 above, the 1st and 2nd Defendants may make an application, on short notice, to apply to strike out the Claim; for the avoidance of doubt such application will be listed for a hearing.
3. Paragraph 4 of the Order dated 11 October 2021 is varied to say that the Claimants must, by 4.00pm on 24 February 2022, pay the principal sum of £11,248, plus interest calculated at the rate of 8% per annum from 11 October 2021 to 10 February 2022 (90 days), being the sum of £225.43, a total of £11,473.43.
4. In default of paragraph 3 above, the Claimants must, by 4.00pm on 10 March 2022, file and serve a detailed witness statement of means.
………
8. The Claimants shall, by 4.00pm on 10 March 2022, pay the 1st and 2nd Defendants' costs of their application dated 24 November 2021, summarily assessed in the sum of £6,375.90.
9. The Claimant's application for permission to appeal is refused
Appellant's Notice 1
Appeal 1
i. The seven applications (in February and March 2021) were not TWM and the requirement for two TWM applications was not met;
ii. Even if there were two TWM applications then that did not justify a LCRO;
iii. There was serious procedural irregularity;
iv. There was no basis for one against the second Claimant; and
v. It was wrong to make the LCRO in wide terms.
The seven applications
The Applications did not justify a LCRO
Serious procedural irregularity; procedurally unfair
The second Claimant
LCRO too wide in its terms
Appeal 2
Appeal 3
(i) the seven applications held to be TWM;
(ii) the informal (e-mail) application of the 15th of March 2021;
(iii) the application for inspection of the bank statements;
(iv) the Claimant's application of 5th July 2021;
(v) Mr and Mrs Halborg's application of the 8th April;
(vi) the Solicitor Defendants applications of the 26th January, 2nd March, and 14th May 2021;
(vii) The costs of the 6th July hearing; and
(viii) The costs reserved by the order of the 16th of February 2021.
and further that any payments on account ordered were excessive in any event.
(a) £8,000 on account to Mr and Mrs Halborg in the Trust Claim.
(b) £13,000.00 in relation to the Solicitor Defendants; and
(c) £8,000.00 in relation to the Barrister Defendant.
Appeal 4
"absolutely satisfied that had he wanted to, and I say wanted to, he could have arranged it (child care) and if it was absolutely necessary he could have instructed counsel. He has got multiple other cases where it is apparent that he has also had counsel attending. Therefore, it does not ring true to me."
Appeal 5
Appeal 6
(a) the Claimants only issue County Court claims against the Defendants in either the Trust Claim or the Lawyers' Claim, in the County Court at Luton (and to notify proceedings in other courts/tribunals to Her Honour Judge Bloom); and
(b) to have the Delivery Up Claim transferred to the County Court at Luton.
Appellant's Notice 2
Appeal 7
Appeal 8
Appellant's Notice 3 and 7
Appeal 9
(a) the seven TWM orders made by Her Honour Judge Bloom on 6th July 2021;
(b) the two TWM orders made by Her Honour Judge Bloom on 6th July 2021;
(c) the two TWM orders made by Deputy District Judge Brown on 18th February 2021 in claim G5QZ82K7 and 10th May 2021 by Deputy District Judge Fowler in claim F7QZ3D82 both brought by the First Claimant (as a landlord) against Ms. Jessica Adams; and
(d) the TWM order made by His Honour Judge Mithani QC (another Designated Civil Judge) on 2nd August 2021 in claim F7QZ3D82.
Appellant's notice 4
(a) the order of Her Honour Judge Bloom of 4th October 2021 (dealing with the application of 15th Sept 2021); and
(b) the order of Her Honour Judge Bloom of 29th September 2021 refusing permission for various applications.
Appeal 10
(a) the correct form (form N245) had not been used (for an application under CPR 40.9A); and
(b) insufficient evidence had been provided to justify the grant of an extension.
Appeal 11
Appeal 13
(i) to amend /stay the costs orders made on 7th July 2021 against the second claimant;
(ii) to increase the costs budget;
(iii) to apply for the claim and counterclaim to be tried separately; and
(iv) to extend the time to file witness statements.
"Permission is refused to apply for a separate trial of the claim and counterclaim; the claim has been progressing since 2019, and in the directions questionnaire, filed on 23 July 2019, the claimant did not seek a split trial; the December 2020 costs budget did not suggest the same nor was it raised in the claimant's skeleton argument prepared in January 2021 for the CCMC. Indeed, the claimant wanted this case heard with G00LU395 and never suggested a separate trial of the counterclaim. No good reasons given as to why now, two years later, the claim and counterclaim should be tried separately."
Appellant's Notice 6
Appeal 18
Recusal
Appellant's Notice 10
Appeal 20
(i) the refusal to set aside the Court's order dated 8th December 2021 (on the Claimant's application dated 19th January 2022); and
(ii) the refusal of permission for an application to be made (again on the application of 19th January 2022). The Claimant sought permission to apply for inspection of the first and second Defendants supplementary disclosure list and delivery up of stolen or wrongfully detained documents. There is one appeal in this notice (appeal 20) and the three grounds originally pleaded were all pursued at the hearing.
"The sum due to defendants from the claimants, as a result of previous costs orders, is £14,178.00. That sum, together with interest from the date hereof at a rate of 8% per annum, shall be paid by monthly instalments of no less than £2,500.00, with the first payment to be made by 4pm on 1st November 2021, and thereafter on the first Monday of each month after January 2022, when the payment should be made on 5th January 2022. Further, within 14 days of contracts being exchanged in the sale of 18 Sylvan Street, Leicester, the claimants must use whatever sum the first claimant receives as the contract deposit to reduce the sum outstanding to the first and second defendants and/or within 14 days of the completed sale of any other of the first claimant properties, the claimants must pay, in full, the outstanding costs sum and interest."
"1. There shall be permission for the first claimant to bring an application to vary the order of 11 October 2021 ("the October order") provided that the application has attached to it a detailed witness statement that contains a detailed statement of means containing the information in Form 245 and the precise terms of his proposals and to which they must be exhibited all documents in support showing why he was unable to meet the payment plan set out in paragraph 4 of the October order and documents in support of his proposals.
2. The application will be heard by her Honour Judge Bloom, not a court officer, and should be listed with a time estimate of 90 minutes."
"Permission pursuant to PD3C to make an application in terms to be drafted (and which application is intentionally not attached, so that with respect Her Honour Judge Bloom cannot purport to decide the application rather than whether permission is given to bring it)."
The first Claimant continued:
"Despite the terms of the application, the order gave permission for the application to be made (and such permission having been granted is relied on in this application) but also purported:
(i) to ignore the fact that the application to be permitted was specified to be made ONLY to a Court official pursuant to CPR rule 40.9A and NOT to HHJ Bloom…;
(ii) to attempt to set conditions as to the making of the application permitted, notably as the timescale and accompanying evidence…;
…
Accordingly the First Claimant … repeats the terms of the application for permission and requests in order that reflects the terms of the actual application made, now that permission has been granted for the application. This will include (by omission of any contrary specification) that the application now permitted, and to be lodged: will not have a time limit; will include such supporting evidence as the applicant decides (and not with respect what the judge feels a permission stage would be best … ; and it will be a decision for a court official and not with respect by the judge (as with respect permission application made abundantly clear on its face)."
"for permission to issue an application to seek inspection (by way of copy documents and/or in person) of the purported "supplementary" disclosure documents of the first and second defendants (not yet recently provided, despite repeated requests and demands); and for orders that all and any originals and copies of stolen or wrongfully retained documents be delivered up forthwith and such documents (originals and any copies) be deleted forthwith from any purported disclosure list of the first and second defendants, together with costs."
"when will we receive these purported disclosures and the revised draft consolidated index? Again, we cannot finalise our clients' witness statements without these. If you do not supply these we will need to apply to the court without further reference to you. Take this as notice under PD 3C for permission application purposes."
(a) there was no, and never had been, any difficulty as far as the Defendants were concerned with documents on their lists being inspected by the Claimant. This was confirmed in the letter of 20th January 2022; meaning the first part of the Claimants application was unnecessary;
(b) there was an issue from the Defendants' perspective as regards the Claimant's disclosure in that he had not provided relevant copies of the bank statements, the subject of a specific order. However, Mr Ashdown confirmed there was no problem with compliance with this order;
(c) the Defendants would like to see the originals of some handwritten board minutes as there is concern that these are not documents which were prepared at the time that it stated on their face; and
(d) there was an issue between the parties about an attendance note in a file ("the Bailey file") which the Defendants say is relevant to a pleaded point (as regards credibility of the first Claimant) in both the defence and the reply to defence.
Appellant's Notice 11
Appeal 22
"I order that … (the statement and the provision of relevant details) … because the court takes the view that either Mr Halborg and the company are able to meet this debt, in which case they must pay it. If they are not able to meet it, they must properly demonstrate to this court that they are impecunious or that there is another method of enforcement that should be proceeded with before a strike out takes place. The court simply does not have the information at this point in time to be able to ascertain whether or not there are other mechanisms of execution to enforce the costs in this case."
Appeal 24
"I just make the point that the combination of the application and Mr Halborg's witness statement make a bundle that runs to I think nearly 470 odd pages which is to some extent or mainly because of how Mr Halborg and Halborg Limited choose to operate in terms of defending and arguing every single point. That is their legal right, they are entitled to do so, but if they do so there are costs consequences because it increases the costs. Mr Halborg filed a very detailed witness statement only this week and the skeleton argument yesterday. They had to be considered by the other side and they increase the costs. That is the reality."
Conclusion
- Appellant's Notice 1 – Appeal 3 – ground 33(ii) only in relation to the indemnity costs for the inspection of documents in the Barrister Defendant's Defence;
- Appellant's Notice 1 – Appeal 3 – ground 33(iii) only in relation to the indemnity costs for Mr and Mrs Halborg's application dated 8th April 2021;
- Appellant's Notice 1 – Appeal 3 – ground 33(v) only in relation to the indemnity costs of the mirror image application in the Lawyers' claim dated 2nd March 2021;
- Appellant's Notice 1 – Appeal 3 – ground 33 only in relation to the indemnity costs of both the informal application of the 15th of March 2021 and the application of 5th of July 2021; and
- Appellant's Notice 11 – Appeal 22 – ground 5.