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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 >> CIBC Mellon Trust Company & Anor v Wolfgang Otto Stolzenberg & Ors [2005] EWCA Civ 628 (24 May 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/628.html Cite as: [2005] 2 BCLC 618, [2005] EWCA Civ 628, [2005] 4 Costs LR 617, [2005] CP Rep 45 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE ETHERTON)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK
and
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
____________________
CIBC MELLON TRUST COMPANY and another |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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WOLFGANG OTTO STOLZENBERG and others |
Defendants |
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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)
Mr John Wardell QC & Mr Jonathan Evans (instructed by Messrs Withers Llp) for the 56th defendant, (respondent/appellant on the cross appeal) to this appeal
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Chadwick :
The circumstances in which the proceedings are now before the Court
The matters for determination in this Court
The judge's approach to the matters before him
"I see no reason in principle, or on the authorities, which precludes the court from making a personal order for costs against such a funder, save in the case of bad faith or impropriety or where he is motivated by an interest conflicting with that of the company. In particular, I see no reason why, if a shareholder funds, controls and directs litigation by a company, entirely to promote his own financial interests, the court should be unable to make such an order against him, any less than it could make the order that was upheld by the Court of Appeal in Chapman [Chapman v Christopher [1998] 1 WLR 12]"
Was the judge correct in law?
"It is not an abuse of the process of the court or in any other way improper or unreasonable for an impecunious plaintiff to bring proceedings which are otherwise proper and bona fide while lacking the means to pay the defendant's costs if they should fail. Litigants do it every day, with or without legal aid. If the plaintiff is an individual, the defendant's only recourse is to threaten the plaintiff with bankruptcy. If the plaintiff is a limited company, the defendant may apply for security and have the proceedings dismissed if the plaintiff fails to provide whatever security is ordered.
The court has a discretion to make a costs order against a non-party. Such an order is, however, exceptional, since it is rarely appropriate. It may be made in a wide variety of circumstances where the third party is considered to be the real party interested in the outcome of the suit. It may also be made where the third party has been responsible for bringing the proceedings and they have been brought in bad faith or for an ulterior purpose or there is some other conduct on his part which makes it just and reasonable to make the order against him. It is not, however, sufficient to render a director liable for costs that he was a director of the company and caused it to bring or defend proceedings which he funded and which ultimately failed. Where such proceedings are brought bona fide and for the benefit of the company the company is the real plaintiff. If in such a case an order for costs could be made against a director in the absence of some impropriety or bad faith on his part, the doctrine of separate liability of the company would be eroded and the principle that such orders should be exceptional would be nullified."
It is, of course, important to keep in mind that (save in the most exceptional circumstances) a director is required, by virtue of his office as a director, to decide whether or not it is in the interests and for the benefit of the company to bring or defend proceedings. If, in causing the company to bring or defend proceedings, he is acting in good faith and in what he believes to be for the benefit of the company, he is entitled to rely on the doctrine of separate liability or, as I would prefer to describe it, the protection of the company's corporate personality.
"Fulton went into administrative receivership in October 1998. It has no assets to meet the costs of the present appeal. It has not even paid Toyota's costs of the action. While the receiver took steps in the conduct of the appeal, the appeal was commenced by the company with the directors then in entire control and it is not disputed that they have been funding the appeal since April. . . . [S]ince the directors took over the conduct of Fulton's appeal in April 1999 they have accepted responsibility for paying Fulton's costs in the appeal. . . . [T]he directors appreciated that the appeal was a difficult one. To my mind it was not an appeal which on any realistic objective assessment could be said to have good prospects of success. This court had little difficulty in rejecting the argument put forward on behalf of Fulton."
Lord Justice Peter Gibson (with whom the other members of this Court, Lord Justice Pill and Lord Justice Laws, agreed) expressed the view that there was a plain case for making the directors liable for at least some of the costs. He said this:
"In my judgment it would be just to exercise the power to make a non-party pay costs. It is extremely doubtful whether the receiver would have proceeded with the appeal to the point of a hearing: it only went to a hearing because of the intervention of the directors in funding the appeal. There is some evidence that they were bitter against Toyota for what they perceived to be Toyota's high-handed conduct. An objective appraisal of the chances of success should, in my judgment, have made them cautious about proceeding with this appeal. Where a person has maintained or funded an action, in my judgment, that person is at risk in costs (Murphy v Young's Brewery [1997] 1 WLR 1591 at 1601E-F per Lord Justice Phillips). The directors, further, had a financial interest in pursuing the appeal. They were at least guarantors of the debts of the company and so were personally interested in the outcome of the litigation. In my judgment, where a person is prepared to fund litigation by an insolvent litigant, that person can properly be made liable in costs, particularly so when that person has a personal interest in the litigation and is aware of the risk as these directors were."
Mr Cavazza's cross-appeal
(1) It was not in dispute that, since about August 2001, Mr Cavazza had "embarked on a course to set aside the [1999] judgments"; nor that, in order to do so he had funded, directed and controlled the litigation in the names of Mora and Chascona. He had done so "purely for his own financial interests to preserve the large investment he made in acquiring the shares in Mora and Chascona". He was not, and never had been, a director of either of those companies. There was no evidence that the directors in particular, Mr Martineghi, who in May 2002 replaced Mr Gambazzi (a defendant to the proceedings) as the sole director of the two companies had played any part whatsoever in decisions whether or how to pursue the set aside applications. At paragraph 98 of his judgment the judge said this:
"Like the insurers in Chapman, the reality is that Mr Cavazza was the applicant in the Set Aside Applications, acting exclusively in his own financial interests. He was not appointed to manage Mora and Chascona and had no duty to do so. It is clear from his evidence that, in deciding whether or not to make the Set Aside Applications, he placed his own interests above and apart from those of the companies."
(2) The costs of the set aside applications had been very substantial. As the judge observed, the claimants had been billed by their legal advisers in the amount of £1,004,198 in respect of those costs. That was unsurprising: the factual and the procedural background were complex, the documents for the hearing occupied sixty lever arch files and the hearing had lasted six days. That the costs would be very substantial must have been within the contemplation of Mr Cavazza when he decided that the applications would be made. He must have appreciated, also, that Mora and Chascona had no means to pay the claimants' costs of the applications, if unsuccessful; so that, unless he were to pay those costs, they would have to be added to "the vast sums already due to the Claimants under [the 1999 judgments], including unsatisfied orders for costs."
(3) The set aside applications ought to have been seen to be speculative in the sense that, although not bound to fail, it was (at best) "highly uncertain that they would succeed".
(4) It would have been open to the claimants to apply for security (or, in the circumstances of this case, increased security) for the costs of the set aside applications see the observations of this Court in Metalloy Supplies Ltd v M A (UK) Ltd [1997] 1 WLR 1613, 1618C. But that was not a reason, in this case, for refusing an order for costs against Mr Cavazza after the event. As the judge put it: "It has not been suggested . . . that, if the claimants had returned to court from time to time to increase the £100,000 security [already ordered by Mr Justice Jacob on 13 May 2002], such increase would not have been granted on appropriate evidence and would not have been paid by Mr Cavazza". Further, it could not be right in principle that "if the security in fact provided [the £100,000 ordered by Mr Justice Jacob] and known to be provided by the third party funder, proves in the event to have been too little, the court is precluded from making an order against the third party at the end of the case for the balance".
The claimants' appeal
"The Claimants have, in my judgment, always pursued the Costs Assessment as a purely tactical weapon to assist the defeat of the Set Aside Applications, either on the substantive hearing of those Applications, or by the imposition of conditions as to the payment of past costs, in any order setting aside the Judgments or as a condition of permission to appeal."
And, at paragraph 141, he said this:
"In my judgment, it would have been in accordance with the Overriding Objective, and more reasonable of the Claimants, to have waited until [a condition for payment of costs which were the subject of the Costs Assessment] was actually imposed before embarking on the exercise of the Costs Assessment. Thus far the Costs Assessment has been used as a tactical weapon, which has proved of no tactical value to the Claimants or the Court."
(1) The applications to set aside the 1999 judgments had been made by notice dated 5 December 2001. On 27 February 2002 the claimants applied for an order that the set aside applications be stayed unless and until Mora and Chascona made substantial interim payments on account of outstanding costs that is to say, on account of costs which had already been assessed and on account of costs which had not then been assessed but which had been awarded by the 1999 judgments.(2) In a witness statement made by the solicitor then acting for Mora and Chascona (Mr Andrew Ford) on 1 May 2002 and filed in opposition to the claimants' application for a stay it was pointed out that the rules required that detailed assessment proceedings had to commence within three months of the date of the relevant judgment or final order and that the claimants had not complied with that requirement. Mr Ford had gone on to say this:
"In such circumstances, the court may disallow all or any of the interest otherwise payable to the receiving party (the Claimants). Further, if a party or his legal representative has failed to comply with a rule, practice direction or order, the court may disallow all or part of the costs that are being assessed (CPR 44.14). I would suggest that to delay the commencement of a detailed assessment for more than 2 years is grounds for the costs to be disallowed in part if not in their entirety."It was said on behalf of the companies that it was impossible to know what deductions the costs judge would make in respect of the delay which had occurred; and that that was a reason why it was not appropriate for the court to make any order for a payment on account of past, but unassessed, costs.(3) In a witness statement made on 9 May 2002 by the claimants' solicitor, Mr Pugh, in response to the points which had been made by Mr Ford in his witness statement of 1 May 2002, the claimants' failure to commence detailed assessment proceedings within the time prescribed by the rules was explained in these terms:
"Until the Claimants have been able to recover satisfaction of the judgment made against Mora and Chascona or they have met the costs orders that have been taxed, it would have been premature for the Claimants to seek a detailed assessment of these court orders. It is not in the interests of either of the parties [or] the Court to go through the time extensive process of preparing bills of cost and a detailed assessment until the judgments have been successfully enforced."And it was pointed out that the claimants had "out of an abundance of caution" made an application on 22 February 2000 for an order for a general extension of time for the detailed assessment of costs under orders made against all the defendants to the proceedings (including Mora and Chascona). A general extension had been granted until 29 June 2001. Although no application for a further extension had been made, it was said that there was "no reason to believe that a further extension would not be granted, nor that this would not extend to include the various costs orders referred to in this application".
(4) The claimants' application for a stay of the set aside applications came before Mr Justice Jacob on 13 May 2002. In the course of that hearing the claimants indicated that what they were seeking, as a condition of the set aside applications being allowed to proceed, was an interim payment of £1.5 million in respect of past costs (of which £500,000 was in respect of costs already assessed) and a further £300,000 in respect of security for the further costs of the set aside applications. The judge made the order sought in relation to past costs; and ordered security in respect of future costs, but in the reduced sum of £100,000.
(5) The claimants commenced proceedings for a detailed assessment of costs on 5 September 2002. At the same time, they issued an application for an interim certificate. That application was to be heard on 26 November 2002.
(6) The companies appealed from Mr Justice Jacob's order of 13 May 2002. On 19 November 2002 this Court (Lord Justice Peter Gibson, Lord Justice Mance and Lady Justice Hale) allowed the appeal in relation to the past costs; but did not disturb the order in respect of future costs (£100,000).
(7) In a skeleton argument, dated 22 November 2002, prepared by counsel for use on the application for an interim costs certificate which was about to be heard, it was said:
"No costs have yet been agreed or assessed in this case. The purpose of this application is to demonstrate to the Judge who hears the paying parties' forthcoming application to set aside the default judgment entered against them and the other defendants on 21 October 1999 that the paying parties have between them caused the Claimants to expend legal costs of at least £5m so far in this litigation; that unless and until the judgment is set aside the paying parties are liable to the Claimants for at least that amount; and for the Judge to be able to take these matters into account when deciding whether or not the judgment should be set aside."(8) On 26 November 2002 the senior costs judge granted an interim certificate in the sum of £525,000, to be paid within 14 days. The claimants' appeal in respect of the amount of that interim certificate was dismissed by Mr Justice Davis on 19 February 2003.
(9) The set aside application was heard by Mr Justice Etherton in December 2002. In the course of that hearing counsel appearing for Mora and Chascona offered certain concessions, should the court set aside the 1999 judgments. These are set out by the judge at paragraph 121 of his judgment of 19 February 2004 (in the form of an extract from the transcript of proceedings in December 2002). They may, I think, be summarised as (i) a concession that, if the court were to set aside the 1999 judgments, Mora and Chascona would submit to a condition that they pay all costs orders, including the costs of the proceedings, subject to assessment and (ii) that the companies were not seeking to set aside any past costs orders.
(10) Judgment on the set aside applications was delivered on 3 February 2003. Mora and Chascona sought the judge's permission to appeal, but that application was adjourned so that consideration could be given as to what (if any) terms as to security for the claimants' costs of an appeal would be acceptable. The adjourned hearing of the application for permission came back before the judge on 25 July 2003. As I have said, he refused permission.
(11) In the meantime, the claimants had pursued the detailed assessment. There was a hearing before the senior costs judge at the beginning of July 2003. On 18 July 2003 he delivered a judgment which addressed certain major issues of principle; including (in particular) whether the two companies were jointly and severally liable for all the costs of the proceedings, or were liable for part only of those costs. He held that, in principle, the companies were liable for all the costs of the proceedings. That led the companies to decide that they did not intend to take any further part in the detailed costs assessment. In a letter dated 15 August 2003 from their solicitors, they sought to withdraw the concessions made at the hearing before Mr Justice Etherton in December 2002:
"For the avoidance of doubt, we should make it clear that the concession offered to Mr Justice Etherton by Leading Counsel (for Mora and Chascona to pay past costs) was a concession made for the purposes of the applications and hearing before him and, in the light of his rejection of those applications, the concession has fallen away. If we are wrong about that, we hereby formally withdraw that concession and confirm that it will not be renewed in the Court of Appeal, should we receive permission to appeal the order of Mr Justice Etherton dated 3rd February 2003."(12) As I have said earlier in this judgment, the detailed costs assessment resumed at the end of September 2003. The senior costs judge ordered the two companies to pay the claimants' costs of the costs assessment. In a ruling on 26 September 2003 he addressed the question whether the claimants should be denied interest on costs by reason of delay the point which had been raised by Mr Ford in his witness statement of 1 May 2002. He said this:
"The delay by the claimants in drawing their bill is entirely justified by the fact that prior to December 2001 it would have been a waste of money, frankly, because the defendants on the face of it at least had no worthwhile assets, and certainly insufficient to satisfy the judgment.Once [the defendants] had applied, in December 2001, to set aside the default judgments, an application which they continued to pursue, it became not only justifiable but necessary to draw up a bill and have that assessed. If one takes, as a starting point, the period within which a bill ought to have been lodged and served, if one takes the starting point as December 2001, that would bring one, by applying the normal period of three months to March 2001 (sic).Given, however, the size and complexity of this bill, it seems to me that to draw the bill up and commence proceedings for detailed assessment by September 2001 (sic) is again justifiable.In those circumstances, there seems no reason to me why interest should not run throughout the period from the original date of judgment, 21 October 1999."[Note: It is clear from the context that the references in that passage to March 2001 and September 2001 are to March 2002 and September 2002.]On 24 October 2003 the senior costs judge granted final costs certificates against Mora and Chascona under the order of 21 October 1999 in the sum of £10,825,281.80. He awarded the claimants their costs of the detailed costs assessment, which (as I have said) they estimate at £500,000.
(13) Permission to appeal from Mr Justice Etherton's order of 3 February 2003 (which he had refused on 25 July 2003) was granted by this Court (Lord Justice Mummery and Lord Justice Mance) on 11 November 2003. The claimants applied for security for their costs of the appeal. That application came before Sir Swinton Thomas, sitting as a judge of this Court, at the end of January 2004. On 13 February 2004 he ordered that £450,000 be paid into court by Mora and Chascona as security for the costs of the appeal; and that a further sum of £600,000 be paid into court on account of the costs of the hearing of the set aside applications in December 2002 and the permission to appeal application in July 2003. If those conditions were not met, the appeal from the order of 3 February 2003 was to be dismissed. As Mr Justice Etherton observed, at paragraph 24 of his judgement of 19 February 2004:
"Those conditions have not been satisfied, and I have before me no evidence as to whether or not they will be satisfied. It is not in dispute that they can only be satisfied if Mr Cavazza is willing and able to pay the sums required."(14) The appeal itself was heard on 30 June 2004 and was dismissed.
The Court of Appeal costs
Conclusion
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker:
Lord Justice Kennedy:
1. The appeal be allowed
2. The 56th Defendant do pay, on the standard basis, the Claimants' costs of and occasioned by the detailed assessment proceedings against the 10th and 38th Defendants pursuant to the Order of Senior Costs Judge Hurst dated 26 September 2003.
3. The 56th Defendant do pay the costs of the appeal and the costs of the application dated 6 February 2004; such costs, unless agreed, to be the subject of detailed assessment on the standard basis.
4. The 56th Defendant do pay the costs of the cross appeal dated 30 April 2004; such costs, unless agreed, to be the subject of detailed assessment on the standard basis.
5. The 56th Defendant do pay assessed on the standard basis, the Claimant's costs of and occasion by the 10th and 38th Defendants' appeal and application for permission to appeal the Order of Mr Justice Etherton dated 3 February 2003, (such costs to include the costs of the Claimants' application for an Order that the 10th and 38th Defendants provide security for costs of the appeal and that conditions be imposed on the appeal heard by Dir Swinton Thomas on 30 January 2004 and 4 February 2004).
6. The 56th Defendant do pay the Claimants; costs of the Application dated 22 September 2004; such costs; unless agreed, to be the subject of detailed assessment on the standard basis.
7. The 56th Defendant do pay the sum of £88,000 by way of interim payment of the costs payable under paragraphs A(3), B(2) and C(2) above.
8. The 56th Defendant's application for leave to appeal to the House of Lords to be dealt with on paper.