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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Capital Bank Plc v Stickland [2004] EWCA Civ 1677 (10 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1677.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 1677, [2005] 1 WLR 3914, [2005] WLR 3914 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY, MERCANTILE COURT
(His Honour Judge Kershaw QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
and
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
____________________
CAPITAL BANK Plc |
Claimant/ Respondent |
|
- and - |
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PETER STICKLAND |
Defendant/ Appellant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
(instructed by DLA) for the Claimant//Respondent
EVAN ASHFIELD Esq
(instructed by Evan Dodd) for the Defendant/Appellant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Longmore:
This appeal addresses the problems that can arise when a claimant makes a Part 36 offer which a defendant wishes to accept after the passage of 21 days from the date of the offer during which his right to accept it is unfettered.
Part 36 of the Civil Procedure Rules deals both with offers to settle and payments into court.
Part 36.5 of the CPR provides under the heading of "Form and Content of a Part 36 offer":-
"36.5 (1) A Part 36 offer must be in writing
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
36.5 (6) A Part 36 offer made not less than 21 days before the start of the trial must –
(a) be expressed to remain open for acceptance for 21 days from the date it is made; and
(b) provide that after 21 days the offeree may only accept it if –
(i) the parties agree the liability for costs; or
(ii) the court gives permission.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
36.5 (8) If a Part 36 offer is withdrawn it will not have the consequences set out in this Part."
Part 36.6 then deals with notice of a Part 36 payment and Part 36.6.5 provides that a Part 36 payment may be withdrawn or reduced only with the permission of the court.
"36.11 (1) A claimant may accept a Part 36 offer or a Part 36 payment made not less than 21 days before the start of the trial without needing the court's permission if he gives the defendant written notice of acceptance not later than 21 days after the offer or payment was made
(2) If –
(a) a defendant's Part 36 offer or Part 36 payment is made less than 21 days before the start of the trial; or
(b) the claimant does not accept it within the period specified in paragraph (1) –
(i) if the parties agree the liability for costs, the claimant may accept the offer or payment without needing the permission of the court;
(ii) if the parties do not agree the liability for costs the claimant may only accept the offer or payment with the permission of the court.
(3) Where the permission of the court is needed under paragraph (2) the court will, if it gives permission, make an order as to costs."
The converse position relating to the time for acceptance of a claimant's Part 36 offer is then dealt with in very similar terms in Part 36.12 as follows:-
"36.12 (1) A defendant may accept a Part 36 offer made not less than 21 days before the start of the trial without needing the court's permission if he gives the claimant written notice of acceptance not later than 21 days after the offer was made.
(2) If –
(a) a claimant's Part 36 offer is made less than 21 days before the start of the trial; or
(b) the defendant does not accept it within the period specified in paragraph (1)
(i) if the parties agree the liability for costs, the defendant may accept the offer without needing the permission of the court;
(ii) if the parties do not agree the liability for costs the defendant may only accept the offer with the permission of the court.
(3) Where the permission of the court is needed under paragraph (2) the court will, if it gives permission, make an order as to costs."
The history of the proceedings is that a claim form was issued in early 2003 for delivery up of the vessel or payment of its value, limited to £88,818.12 plus interest. On 10th June 2003 the Bank's solicitors, DLA, made a Part 36 offer to settle the proceedings for £85,000 including interest. The offer was in proper form save that it unnecessarily referred to costs but, since the reference to costs only restated the consequences as to costs set out in the Rules, it was agreed that this did not matter. Mr Stickland did not respond to the letter of 10th June but did cause a defence to be served in July 2003. The only point of substance taken in that defence was that the vessel in respect of which the proceedings were brought was not the same vessel as had been mortgaged to the Bank. On 27th November 2003 DLA repeated the offer made in June and still got no response.
(1) the Hull Identification Number PRTGB0021797, given in the original bill of sale made out to the company from whom Mr Stickland had acquired the vessel, corresponded to the Number moulded into both the transom and the transom bathing ladder on the vessel, although it did not correspond with a number on a brass plaque on the vessel which looked brand new rather than the 10 years old which it purported to be;
(2) the number 900944 which the British Registry had assigned to the CATABATIC on registration was clearly displayed on the vessel.
Mr Moody made his report on 11th February and it was duly served on Mr Stickland's solicitors.
"Our client will settle upon the terms of the Part 36 Offer put forward by letter dated 10 June 2003, provided it is accepted by your client by no later than 31 December 2003. Clearly the parties will need to apply for the offer to be accepted out of time."
There matters remained until 25th February, two days before the day on which the trial was fixed to take place. On that day Mr Stickland's solicitors sent a fax to DLA purporting to accept the offer contained in the letters of 10th June and 11th December 2003. On the following day DLA responded that the offer had lapsed and that Mr Stickland required the Court's permission to accept the offer which he did not have. They said that any application to the judge for permission to accept the offer would be opposed. Thus it was that the first business of the judge on the morning of the trial was to receive and consider Mr Stickland's application that the offer be accepted as at that date.
The judge, after setting out the history of the matter, observed that the strength of the claim had altered for the better from the Bank's point of view and that for that reason alone he would refuse the application. Matters which reinforced his view were the defendant's persistent flouting of the court's orders, the absence of any security for payment of the £85,000 if he were to decide that it could be accepted and the lateness of the application made on the day of the trial.
On behalf of Mr Stickland Mr Ashfield (who did not appear before Judge Kershaw) submitted:-
(1) the only proper reason for refusing a defendant permission to accept a claimant's Part 36 offer after the initial 21 day period had elapsed was that a substantial change of circumstance had occurred, such as would entitle a defendant, who had made a payment into court (the converse case), to withdraw or reduce any payment into court which he had made;
(2) it followed that a claimant who wished to object to late acceptance of his Part 36 offer should only be permitted to object if he at the same time withdrew or reduced his Part 36 offer on the basis of a substantial change of circumstance (or if, at least, he could be treated as being entitled to withdraw or reduce his offer on that basis);
(3) no such change of circumstances had occurred in the present case;
(4) it was illogical to allow a claimant to retain the benefit of an existing Part 36 offer while refusing a defendant permission to accept it late; that was to allow a claimant to have his cake and, at the same time, to eat it. Either the defendant should be allowed to accept the offer late or the claimant should be required to withdraw or reduce it; in that event he would be unable to obtain the automatic benefit of the Part 36 costs and interest consequences, although he would be able to invite the court to exercise a general discretion on costs by reference to the fact that there had once been a time when a Part 36 offer could have been accepted;
(5) on this basis, the judge was wrong to have ordered indemnity costs and 10% (or any) interest on costs pursuant to Part 36.26 and should have awarded costs on a standard basis or, at most, indemnity costs from the time of the original offer to the time when it could have been withdrawn without any interest being payable on such costs.
(1) the judge had an open-ended discretion whether to allow late acceptance of a Part 36 offer;
(2) there was no error in law in the way he exercised his discretion; there had been a change of circumstance and, even if there had not, he was entitled to rely on the three further factors mentioned in his judgment;
(3) there was no justification for requiring a claimant to withdraw or reduce his offer as the price of his opposition to an application to accept the offer after the 21 days had elapsed;
(4) the judge's order in relation to indemnity costs and interest on such costs was likewise within his discretion; no argument other than for a standard basis throughout had been addressed to him below and any variation of the judge's order should, therefore, not be entertained by the court.
There is virtually no post-CPR authority on this question which is the main reason why permission to appeal has been granted. One possible view of the Rules might be that the right to accept continues after the 21 day period and that the only judicial function is to secure an appropriate order as to costs. Neither counsel argued for this view of the matter although Mr Ashfield came close to it when saying that permission should only be refused if a claimant withdraws or reduces his Part 36 offer (or a defendant applies to withdraw or reduces his payment-in and is allowed to do so). This latter submission reflected the fact that a claimant making a Part 36 offer and a defendant making a payment into court are not in precisely the same position; a claimant may withdraw (or reduce) his offer at any time (see Scammell v Dicker [2001] 1 WLR 651) whereas a defendant who makes a payment into court (and, if he wishes to settle a money claim and automatically obtain Part 36 consequences, he has to make a payment into court, see Part 36.3) can only withdraw or reduce his payment into court with the permission of the court (see 36.6.5). This distinction between offerors under the Rules cannot, however, provide any guide to the principle which should govern the court when a late application to accept an offer is made, since the court's permission is required in either case unless the incidence of costs can be agreed.
"We can see no ground for putting such a limit on the powers of the court . . . It is, in our opinion clear that if the plaintiff does not accept the money within the prescribed time, the court has thereafter complete discretion either to make or refuse an order. In the majority of cases, no doubt, it would only be a question of costs, whether the plaintiff should pay those incurred between the expiration of the seven days and the date of the application, but there may be other considerations."
The plaintiff's application was therefore refused. It is of interest to note that the application by the defendant was also refused, although on technical grounds, without prejudice to a second application being made. The money therefore remained in court, but the court recognised that change of circumstances could in theory be a ground for permitting the payment into court to be withdrawn or reduced. Although that case related to a payment into court by the defendant, similar principles should in my judgment now apply to Part 36 offers by claimants and late applications for their acceptance.
The fact that there has been a change of circumstance is certainly relevant and may well be the most important factor to be taken into account. Mr Ashfield submitted that the judge should not have held it to be relevant on the facts of the present case and for that purpose he relied on the personal injury case Flynn v Scougall, already cited, in which this court was faced with the problem of a defendant wishing to reduce a payment into court during the 21 day period in which the claimant had a prima facie unfettered right to accept it. 4 days after the application and still within the 21 day period the claimant gave notice of acceptance of the payment-in. What had prompted the defendant to apply to reduce the amount of his payment-in was the receipt of the report of his own expert, Mr Pinder, contradicting the claimant's expert's report in relation to the period for which the claimant's working life would be reduced by reason of the accident. This court held that the defendant should not be allowed to reduce his payment-in so soon after it had been made merely in the light of an expert opinion which the defendant had already commissioned dealing with facts, which were already part of the case. At paragraph 39 May LJ (with whom the other members of the court agreed) noted with approval that in an earlier case Garland J had held that the approach of Goddard LJ to the second application in Cumper v Pothecary (by the defendant to reduce the amount of his payment into court) was consistent with the overriding objective of the CPR. What Goddard LJ had said was ([1942] 2 KB at page 70):-
". . . we think it desirable to say that it must not be thought that a defendant who has paid a sum into court is entitled, as of right, to resile from that step. He must, in our opinion, show that there are good reasons for his application – for instance the discovery of further evidence, which puts a wholly different complexion on the case . . . . or a change in the legal outlook brought about by a new judicial decision . . . . and there may be others . . . . We think the same considerations apply, if the matter comes before the court on an application by the plaintiff to have the money paid out to him . . . . it [the court] should consider whether there is a sufficient change of circumstance since the money was paid in to make it just that the defendant should have an opportunity of withdrawing or reducing his payment."
Then at paragraph 42 of his judgment in Flynn v Scougall May LJ said this:-
"The defendant chose to make the Part 36 payment before Mr Pinder's report arrived. In doing so she secured the advantage of an earlier payment into court and took the risk that Mr Pinder's report might improve her evidential position. . . . It was not based on the discovery of new evidence or a change in legal outlook. Rather the defendant was relying on a further review of available information by a fresh expert."
The defendant was thus not allowed to reduce his payment-in and the claimant had a right to accept the amount originally paid into court.
Once the judge had decided that it was inappropriate to permit Mr Stickland to accept the Bank's Part 36 offer, it was relevant for the judge to decide whether the Bank had done better than its offer by going to trial. Clearly it had and the judge had therefore a discretion to make the usual order for costs in those circumstances, including an order for interest on costs at 10% above base rate in accordance with Part 36.21(3).
For these reasons I agree with the orders made by His Honour Judge Kershaw and would dismiss the appeal.
Lord Justice Keene:
Lord Justice Mance:
ORDER: Appeal dismissed; Appellant to pay Respondent's costs of the appeal such costs shall be subject of a detailed assessment on the standard basis up to and including 1 October 2004, on an indemnity basis thereafter.