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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Campbell -v- Campbell and Ors [2016] JRC 190 (18 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2016/2016_190.html Cite as: [2016] JRC 190 |
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Business dispute - application to admit new evidence after trial.
Before : |
T. J. Le Cocq, Esq., Deputy Bailiff, sitting alone |
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Between |
Richard Andrew Campbell |
Plaintiff |
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And |
Robert Campbell |
First defendant |
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And |
Longton Holdings Limited |
Second Defendant |
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And |
Financial Consultants (Jersey) Limited |
First Party Cited |
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And |
FCM Limited |
Second Party Cited |
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Advocate J. S. Dickinson for the Plaintiff.
Advocate M. T. Jowitt for the First Defendant.
judgment
the deputy bailiff:
1. This is an application to admit new evidence after the end of a trial but before the judgment has been circulated in draft or handed down.
2. The substantive case before the Court relates to one aspect of a dispute between two brothers, Richard Andrew Campbell ("Richard") and Robert Campbell ("Robert") concerning their respective entitlements to an interest in various corporate entities through which they conducted their jewellery business or held assets. Longton Holdings Limited ("Longton") is a limited liability company incorporated in Jersey, the beneficial entitlement to the shares of which are held equally by Richard and Robert. The parties cited hold 50% of those shares as nominees for Robert and Richard holds the remaining shares in his own name. The essence of the claim is whether or not Richard is entitled to share in the capital and interest of a loan made to Longton in the amount of £2,919,018.75 and the capital of an interest free loan or loans in the amount of £264,988 (for these purposes referred to as the Longton loans). Other aspects of the dispute between Richard and Robert are being dealt with in proceedings in the High Court of Justice in England ("the English proceedings").
3. On 7th June, 2016, after some six days of evidence and submissions, this Court reserved judgment in these proceedings.
4. Some weeks later we received notice of two applications. The first application was made by Richard to admit new evidence. The second application was made by Robert to strike out part of the prayer of Richard's re-amended Order of Justice the effect of which would be to reduce the ambit of the issues to be determined by the Court in its judgment to be handed down. On 13th September, 2016, I sat to hear the first application to admit new evidence. This judgment deals with that matter. The second application has been withdrawn.
5. Richard applies to admit further evidence. That evidence can be divided into three categories:
(i) Emails exchanged between Robert and Messrs Goodman Jones, Chartered Accountants ("the Goodman Jones emails");
(ii) Evidence which shows that contrary to Robert's express evidence given before this Court, in fact a will was drawn up for him during the course of October 2002;
(iii) Evidence to show that a payment was made in the sum of £132,494 by Robert to Taylor Wessing's client account in June 2016.
The relevance of this evidence will be touched on below.
6. No Jersey authority was put before me to assist in identifying the factors bearing upon the Court's discretion to admit new evidence post-hearing but pre-judgment. One Jersey case, that of Perry v Abraham [2003] JRC 108 was cited but there were no reasons articulated by the Court for, in that case, declining to admit new evidence prior to handing down judgment.
7. It appears from the English authorities put before me that the approach of the Court, though varying somewhat to reflect the fact that an application to admit evidence is pre-judgment, is to look first at the principles on which the Court of Appeal will admit fresh evidence not before the trial court. Those principles are set out in the well-known case of Ladd v Marshall [1954] 1 WLR 1489 in which Denning LJ said this:
8. In Charlesworth v Relay Roads [2000] 1 WLR Neuberger J explained the approach that a court might take when faced with an application to admit new evidence before judgment by reference to the factors set out in Ladd v Marshall above. At page 295(f), he said this:
9. At page 296(e) the judge went on to say:
10. Of course Ladd v Marshall dealt specifically with the circumstances in which evidence should be admitted by the Court of Appeal that was not before the trial court and Charlesworth v Relay Roads Limited and others dealt with circumstances in which judgment had been handed down but the order had not been perfected. In those cases the applicant seeking to admit new evidence had had the benefit of reviewing the judgment and the reasons on which the court based the decision contained within the judgment.
11. The instant case is rather different. There has been no judgment handed down and neither party in this case knows in whose favour the court will find or for what reasons.
12. I was referred to the judgment of Hamblen J in Forster v Action Aviation Limited [2013] EWHC 2930 (QB) in which the learned judge was faced with an application to admit two further documents following the conclusion of trial but before judgment had been handed down. At page 299 of his judgment at paragraph 8 and 9 the judge said this:
13. In my view the statement in Forster v Action Aviation Limited succinctly sets out the factors which I should consider when determining Richard's application to admit new evidence. I should certainly have regard to the principles in Ladd v Marshall but without expecting them to apply in full rigor and I should consider the factors set out in the quotation immediately above.
14. As I have said, the first category of new evidence that Richard wishes to adduce is the Goodman Jones emails. These emails came to light during the discovery process in the English proceedings. Those proceedings deal with a different aspect of the dispute between Richard and Robert to that dealt with and argued before this Court. However, in the course of discovery, and specifically after an application for specific discovery, Robert disclosed certain emails which had not formerly been available to Richard nor disclosed within the proceedings in Jersey. I will refer to two of the emails.
15. The first email passes between Robert and Goodman Jones and is dated 25th January, 2012. In the email, Robert deals with setting up a trust and that that various assets should be transferred by Robert on that trust. It includes the words "my half of the assets are extricably linked to his (Richard's) half".
16. The second email passes from Robert to Goodman Jones dated 8th February, 2012, in which Robert was responding to an enquiry made by Goodman Jones which expressed the assumption that 50% of the company (taken to be a reference to Longton) was to be transferred into trust and asking whether 50% of the benefit of the debt was also to be transferred. In his response Robert said "yes both assumptions are correct".
17. This, so Richard argues, is evidence that supports his case that he has a 50% interest in relevant assets and that those assets include the Longton loans. Further, so Richard argues, he could not have tendered the evidence earlier because he was not aware of it as it had not been disclosed as it should have been, it may well have an important effect, and it is apparently credible as it is Robert's own communication.
18. Robert resists the admission of this new evidence. Whilst conceding that the Goodman Jones emails are capable of bearing upon the issue as to whether there existed a common intention between Richard and Robert as to entitlement to the capital loan to Longton and interest it is argued that they are not significant and would probably not influence the result or affect any decision to be made. Robert points out that this area was the subject of cross examination on another document that was before the Court, nothing new would be gained, and the answers that Robert gave in response to that other document were likely to mirror the answers that he would give if cross-examined on the evidence which Richard now seeks to admit.
19. In my view, the Goodman Jones emails clearly should be admitted. The fact that they may touch on an area that has already been explored to an extent in cross-examination does not alter the fact that had they been available they could have been deployed before the Court to paint a clearer factual picture and put to Robert in cross-examination to challenge the likelihood or credibility of his answers on what might be said to be a key issue before the Court.
20. The other two categories of evidence that Richard seeks to admit do not directly touch upon issues to be determined by the Court. Indeed Richard concedes that those aspects touch to a greater extent on Robert's credibility.
21. It was argued on behalf of Robert that the last two categories of evidence are inadmissible because they go to collateral issues that relate to credibility and nothing more. I was referred to Cross on Evidence (12th edition) where at page 325 the learned authors deal with the general rule relating to finality of answers to collateral questions. The general rule is stated in the following terms:
22. Later, at page 326, after citing discussion about exceptions to the finality rule, the authors say:
23. In dealing with the exceptions the authors say:
24. Phipson on Evidence (18th Edition) deals at paragraph 12-14 with the same issue. It says:
25. The argument put forward by Robert essentially in my view amounts to a submission that if the second and third categories of documents had been before the Court and put to him in cross-examination, his answers would need to be taken as final and that no evidence could have been adduced to contradict his answers as they related to collateral issues and simply went to his credibility.
26. I do not find that argument, if I have characterised it correctly, persuasive. It seems to me that Robert's credibility, and indeed that of his brother Richard, is central to how the Court is likely to determine the issues before it. Furthermore the items that Richard now seeks to adduce are not unrelated to the subject matter of the proceedings.
27. The first such item, the second category of evidence which Richard has sought to adduce relates to the fact that, although Robert had stated in documentation before this Court, and in evidence, and indeed as part of his pleaded case that no will had been drawn up for him in 2002 it appears, from his disclosure in the English proceedings, that such a will had indeed been drawn up. In paragraph 38 of his amended answer Robert pleaded in terms "in the event the will was never made". It seems to me that Richard must be entitled to put before the Court the fact that this pleading was simply wrong and do so armed with apparently conclusive evidence to that effect. For his part Robert might wish to offer an explanation as to why he said what he did in his pleading and evidence but that is an explanation that would form part of the overall picture and assessment of the evidence by the Jurats. It may be that the contents of the will are not relevant to the issues that need to be determined by this Court but it does not seem to me to be the case that the fact that a will has been drawn up, in the light of both the evidence already given and the pleadings, could be said to be wholly irrelevant.
28. Accordingly I admit the second category.
29. The third category is in respect of a payment made in July 2016 by Robert to Taylor Wessing's client account.
30. When he gave evidence before the Court in June 2016 Robert was asked why he was not in a positon to agree that £264,988, a sum held by Robert and claimed in part by Richard, could not be paid into an escrow account or into the English High Court. Robert gave a number of answers including confirming that this sum of money was owed by him to a company involved in the case, Azure Gold Limited. He was pressed by counsel for Richard as to why he would not agree to transfer the money either in to escrow or to the English High Court and gave answers that, it is argued, were not clear or conclusive. It transpires that of this money £132,494 was paid on Robert's instructions in June 2016 to the client account of Robert's lawyers, Taylor Wessing.
31. The context of the evidence concerning the £264,988 was in part that Robert submitted through counsel that Richard's claims in the Jersey proceedings were pre-emptive and that Richard claimed that Robert might use that money for his own purposes.
32. It seems to me that this evidence might be relevant to the submissions before the Court and that, for completeness, it should be before us.
33. Having considered both the Ladd v Marshall principles and the factors set out in Forster v Action Aviation Limited it seems to me that it is appropriate to admit all three categories of evidence. The evidence was not before us because it was not available, it is significant or potentially so, there is no consideration of prejudice that weighs against it being admitted and it may support Richard's case. It is in the interests of justice to admit it.
34. How should this evidence now be placed before the Court? Both counsel submit that it should not be necessary for any further oral evidence to be heard. All of the evidence to be admitted is in the form of documentation and it seems to me that subject to what I say below it is best admitted by being exhibited to an affidavit from Richard identifying what the documentation is and a brief written submission from Richard's counsel as to the relevance of the documentation. That can be met by any affidavit that Robert may need to put before the Court to explain the contents of the documentation and a further written submission from Robert's legal adviser to make submissions on that evidence.
35. I do not think that submissions or affidavit evidence relating to why the documents were not before us sooner or otherwise about the discovery process would be relevant to what we have to determine and accordingly neither Richard's affidavit nor Roberts' should refer to those matters.
36. Richard's affidavit and submission should be filed within 7 days of the date hereof and Robert's response 7 days thereafter.
37. I do not rule out the possibility that, that documentation being exchanged, there may need nonetheless to be examination and cross-examination. I hope that that will not prove necessary, but I give liberty to apply for that purpose and with regard to the timetable.