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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 >> Pritchard Joyce & Hinds (A Firm) v Batcup & Anor [2009] EWCA Civ 369 (05 May 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/369.html Cite as: [2009] NPC 67, [2009] EWCA Civ 369, [2009] PNLR 28, [2009] 19 EG 110 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL
Case No. TLQ/07/0201
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
____________________
PRITCHARD JOYCE & HINDS (A FIRM) |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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BATCUP & ANR |
Defendants/Appellants |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Sue Carr QC & Anneliese Day (instructed by Barlow Lyde & Gilbert) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : Tuesday, 24th to Thursday, 26th February 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sullivan :
"The lost claim against Wellers would itself have been a claim for negligence in failing to advise Mr and Mrs Fox of the time limit applicable to a claim against another firm of solicitors, Lindars Leech (and/or the responsible partner, Mr Alan Leech)("LL"). The lost claim against LL would have been for negligent advice given to Mr and Mrs Fox which it was said led to them losing the opportunity of the favourable settlement of a complicated dispute arising out of a property development project in Spain. The advice in question was given in late October 1985, and….the settlement opportunity was lost by the end of that month. Accordingly any claim for that loss would prima facie have had to have been brought by the end of October 1991, and any action against Wellers for failure to advise Mr and Mrs Fox of that deadline would have had to have been brought by the end of October 1997: that is the deadline which it is said [the Respondent] and the [Appellants] failed to draw attention to." (2)
"SV had neither itself confirmed to SLP that it was willing to give such a guarantee nor supplied a draft. The absence of that crucial element means that it is not strictly accurate to describe the Hanson interests as having made an offer – at least in the contractual sense. Nevertheless, in commercial terms there was a deal on the table, albeit one whose acceptability could only be assessed once SV's position had been confirmed; and I refer elsewhere in this judgment to the settlement "offer" in that sense. The terms of the guarantee which SV was prepared to offer were not simply a matter of mechanics. If it was framed as a guarantee in the strict sense, it would have protected Mr Fox against the risk of "mere" non-payment as a result of insolvency or otherwise, but it would not have assured him of payment if the Hanson interests chose to assert that he was himself in breach of his obligations under cl. 4.1 and to invoke their rights under cl. 4.2. That risk, of which Mr Lines was aware, could only be precluded if SV were willing to accept an independent obligation to pay. That seems unlikely, and it would indeed have been inconsistent with the mechanism under which the bills were to be "held" by SV and only released on their clients' authority: it may also be significant in this context that TSW had departed from the proposal that SV accept the bills. The absence of such protection would not have rendered the proposed guarantee from SV worthless, but it meant that Mr and Mrs Fox could not rely on having a summary remedy if Fontana failed to pay."
"In summary, Mr Fox's account is that Mr Leech gave him "forceful" advice that the terms of the draft Agreement were unacceptable, both because the undertakings being sought from himself and Mrs Fox were too wide (and thus gave scope for the Hanson interests to raise spurious allegations of breach) and because the mechanisms proposed for ensuring payment of the future instalments were inadequate. He seemed to know something about Mr Fox's dealings with the Hanson interests already, apparently from Mr Cutting and/or Mr Woods. He emphasised, from his own experience of dealing with the Hanson interests, that they could not be trusted. He made it clear that he believed that, because of that experience, he thought he would be better at dealing with them than SLP. Mr Leech's manner was "dominant" and inspired confidence. In the course of the meeting he asked to speak to Mrs Fox on the telephone, and he summarised to her in strong terms the points which he had made to Mr Fox."
"I need not seek to resolve those differences here, save to say that I am sure from the overall history and from his contemporary letters that Mr Fox was still very willing to settle if he could get reasonable assurance of payments of the future instalments. It is at least clear that Mr Leech advised Mr and Mrs Fox in strong terms that the Agreement as it then stood was unacceptable and that in consequence of that advice they decided to transfer the handling of the matter forthwith from SLP to LL."
"I have expressed to you my deep concern about the terms of settlement being offered by Fontana/Hanson etc; I am particularly concerned about the extensive undertakings which are being required from me and the fact that payment is being spread over 4 years on terms that would give the opposition scope for argument over whether there had been proper compliance with these extremely wide undertakings.
I am apprehensive that they could use this as an excuse for non-payment of stage payments as they fall due. I am also concerned that if I was to proceed on these terms I would be in constant peril of an action to try and snatch back any money actually paid to me.
You must be aware that the entire cause of my complaint about the persons who make up the opposition in this case is that their professed bona-fides are never to be taken at face value and I have no trust whatsoever in any of them."
Mr Fox said that he knew that it was Mr Lines's strong view that the
settlement terms should be accepted and that it was not possible to obtain a second opinion, funded by legal aid, while SLP continued to act for him; and
that accordingly a transfer to another firm was the only option. His letter
continued:
"I am not closing my mind entirely to the prospect of
settlement but simply wish to ensure that I get the possible
terms.
In this context it is important that I should feel secure and
that my wife and I have peace of mind in the knowledge that
we have done the best thing.
I cannot proceed with confidence on the terms currently on
offer.
I and my wife are aware of the risks of delaying acceptance
of the terms and of seeing to negotiate further if we are
advised to do so. However we consider the risks of
proceeding with the terms on offer to be far greater.
We have considered the position very carefully before
arriving at this conclusion and we hope you will not take it
amiss or as a reflection on your own abilities."
"Further to our meeting in your office yesterday when I sought your advice regarding the proposed financial settlement of my claim against Rey/Hanson/Fontana etc, I am now enclosing a copy of the latest Draft Agreement [the fourth draft] that includes the Swiss Volksbank Guarantee, plus other amendments, all of which my present solicitors, Messrs Stoneham Langton & Passmore, have approved.
After my wife and I spoke to you yesterday we both thought you understood our problem of being very anxious to proceed with the completion of the Fontana Agreement but being a little hesitant due to our mistrust of Mr Hanson and our fear of his clever trickery.
However, we both thought you were so definite and convincing in advising us not to sign the Fontana Agreement that in accordance with your instructions I have today posted off to Mr Lines the letter you prepared for me.
I will though, definitely telephone you tomorrow to obtain your views and opinions on this latest Draft Agreement and to discuss your proposal to take over my litigation and to issue Writs for Conspiracy to Defraud against Mr Rey, Mr Hanson, Mr Cobb and others.
I will then be able to telephone Mr Lines of SLP to discuss the contents of the letter I have sent to him and what the latest position is with the Fontana proposals."
"Swiss Volksbank have confirmed that the Guarantee will be provided as soon possible, and they apologise for the delay, however they are having technical problems with their word processors."
"I refer to our various recent conversations and confirm that Stoneham Langton & Passmore have indicated to me that they require no further written authorisation from you in relation to changing the conduct of the dispute from them to me and they are writing to the Law Society today indicating their consent to an amendment to the Certificate showing that my firm now has conduct of the matter. I enclose a copy of my letter to the Secretary to the General Committee
Following my last telephone conversation with you, Mr Lines and I spoke again by telephone (overcoming the difficulties of the power cut which had apparently affected his office) and discussed the mechanics of hand over and the letter he had received from Mr Thomas from Titmuss Sainer and Webb this morning. That letter was in essence chasing for response and reciting, with variable degrees of accuracy, a telephone conversation Mr Thomas and Mr Lines had had last week. I told Mr Lines, and he agreed, that it was not appropriate for him to respond to that letter but he is sending a copy, noted with his comments, so that I may make a full response when notifying Titmuss Sainer and Webb of the change of solicitors, which I propose to do tomorrow. The only principal matter of interest in the letter is that Thomas has come up with an excuse for not supplying the form of Guarantee which it is proposed the Swiss Volksbank will give in support of the terms of the settlement on offer. We are told that they are having problems with a word processor so the terms are not available at present!
As I have advised you in conversation I consider that there are a number of extremely serious defects in the draft agreement currently under discussion. Principally these go to the clauses demanding the handover by you of all the documents relating to the matters in dispute and the persons involved, which I think is a far too onerous commitment for you. If any documents are to be handed over, that is an obligation which should be severely curtailed. As to the so called Bills of Exchange, it is in my view that reference to Bills of Exchange in the Agreement are a complete red herring. Unless the Bills are delivered to you (and it is proposed that they should be withheld from you) they would be practically valueless because you would not be in a position to sue on them unless you were the holder. It is not enough that they are held on deposit by an independent party who is susceptible of being subverted by an instruction not to part with them. Furthermore, unless the bills are going to be endorsed by a responsible party, there is no point whatever in having Bills of Exchange. Certainly you do not want to be in a position where the only possible target for an action on the Bills of Exchange (if you were able to obtain possession of them) would be Fontana Holdings Inc, so that you would have to undertake the same rigmarole of serving Fontana as you did when the current action commenced.
If there is to be no delivery of properly endorsed bills to you, it would be far more honest of the opposition and to your advantage that a Court Order is made specifically in terms that payment of whatever instalments are agreed should be made on particular days so that that order could be enforced immediately on default without having to embark on subsequent fresh litigation. That order itself could form the subject of a Guarantee given by a suitable person, possibly Swiss Volksbank, as security for the payments.
I also take the seriously considered view that the Undertakings being required from you are far too wide and susceptible to further argument. However, if Titmuss Sainer wish to insist on wide undertakings, there is a method of accommodating them to a large extent if the sanction backing up the Undertaking were changed. Rather than permitting Fontana and the guarantor bank to withhold payment from you as the Bills fall due and even to claw back payments already made, the undertakings you give could be made to the Court itself so that if the opposition wanted to make a fight over breach of undertaking, their only proper route to do so would be by way of contempt proceedings against you. That would mean they would have to air their grievances in front of a judge as soon as they make them, as opposed to putting in spurious Defences and Counter Claims as is their normal tactic when Bills of Exchange they have given in the past are bounced by them, or issuing writs with specious Statements of Claim in an effort to terrorise an opponent smaller than themselves into an unfavourable out of Court settlement. In my years of experience of litigating against Mr Rey and his associates, I have seen both tactics used by them to reasonably good effect. It is essential that every effort is made to avoid falling into any trap so that such tactics are available to them in your case.
There are other grounds for objecting to the terms, which we have discussed. I certainly do not like the idea of the only person on the opposition's side being bound by the agreement as Fontana when at the same time, you are being asked to enter obligations for the benefit of Rey and all of his associates (even those who have not been named). Certainly a promise by Fontana that you would not be sued for defamation is worthless as any of the others would be quite free to do so. I know that this is not a particular fear of yours, since you feel you can justify anything you have said by pleading that it is all true or fair comment. On the other hand, libel suits are expensive and one can foresee a further weapon being added to the Rey armoury if this provision were allowed to go through without comment.
After several discussions with you, I believe you appreciate that there can obviously be no guaranteed outcome of the change of solicitors and it may well be that, knowing me well as John Cutting's solicitor, Titmuss Sainer & Webb initially refuse to negotiate further with me on your behalf and try to call the whole deal off. If they were to do so there can be no real certainty when negotiations may resume, if at all. However, if that is the line the opposition adopt, I shall be more than happy to continue the litigation against them with the full force available to me and you can be assured of my commitment to pursue the matter on your behalf.
I shall keep you advised of all developments as they occur."
"We refer to our telephone conversation of the 25th October 1985 when you confirmed that Mr Fox wished to change his solicitors and instruct Lindars Leech. We have not heard from Lindars Leech confirm [sic] this as yet and we are therefore writing to you.
Our clients have instructed us to inform you that because Mr Fox now intends to raise certain issues that have always been considered by our clients to be non-negotiable, and because Mr Fox now intends to change his solicitors and indeed this is yet another example of his lack of seriousness and genuine desire to negotiate a settlement of the whole matter, all offers made to date, where without prejudice or otherwise, are withdrawn.
If necessary, please draw this letter to the attention of your client and to Lindars Leech." (34)
"In this uncertain state of the facts it is impossible now to decide whether Mr Fox, or LL on his behalf, are to be regarded as having rejected the settlement offer – either explicitly or by raising significant new points – or whether what occurred was in substance a withdrawal by the Hanson interests, albeit because they (rightly) anticipated an attempted re-negotiation. Ultimately, it does not much matter: by one means or another it was plainly the advice given by Mr Leech which led to the breakdown in negotiations." (34)
"that the criticisms made by Mr Leech of the terms of the settlement offer were misconceived, and that the consequent advice which they say that he gave that the offer should be rejected was unreasonable. It is their case that the only proper advice to Mr Fox was that given by SLP, namely that the offer should be accepted subject to an acceptable guarantee being offered by SV – which there was no reason to believe would not be forthcoming. Mr Leech's negligent advice, it is said, set in train the sequence of events which led to the offer being withdrawn."
"a discrete claim that as a result of negligent advice given by Mr Leech in October 1985 Mr Fox lost the opportunity to settle the claim for £445,000 at that time, being a claim in respect of which time started to run at the end of October 1985." (44)
"complained of the conduct which had led to the loss of the Mareva in the Fontana action and of Mr Leech's dilatoriness and incompetence to initiating the Hanson action; but there was no complaint, express or implied, about the advice given in October 1985. Wellers did not at that stage have full papers from either SLP or LL: they received the former in December 1991 and the latter in March 1992." (46)
It is to be noted that there was no complaint in the statement that Mr Leech
had advised Mr Fox to change solicitors, Mr Fox merely said:
"For various reasons [I] felt it would be helpful to change solicitors."
"I informed Stoneham Langton & Passmore of our intention and proceeded to arrange a meeting at the office of Lindars Leech in Kensington, London. At this meeting Alan Leech told me he already had a clear understanding of my litigation and knew about my financial difficulties and I confirmed to him that my actions were being undertaken under the Legal Aid Scheme.
Following consideration of the Fontana agreement Alan Leech told me that there were serious defects in the settlement arrangements and that he strongly advised me not to proceed with the matter. During the meeting he also telephoned my wife to emphasise his opinion that we should reject the agreement and let him undertake on our behalf the litigation against Fontana/Rantlodge et al.
On the 23rd October 1985 Alan Leech wrote to me confirming his views in no uncertain terms, following which I and my wife were persuaded to change solicitors. On 24th October Stoneham Langton & Passmore wrote to the Law Society stating they had no objection the transfer to Lindars Leech of the two Legal Aid Certificates Numbers 1/1/83/5465R and 1/1/84/9304K.
I think it is relevant to record that during the initial meeting and discussions with Alan Leech concerning the agreement, my wife and I clearly indicated that the settlements of £125,000 down and the 4 annual payments of £80,000 each were, with the undertakings, quite satisfactory but his adamant opinion that we would never receive the annual payments and would be in danger of having to repay the £125,000 had persuaded us to take his advice.
Amazing though it might appear now I must recall that the initial letter from Alan Leech of the 23rd October 1985 is the one and only written communication I have received from him during the five years he had acted for us. This has not been through the want of asking as many times he has been requested to give us his views or opinions in writing and he has even refrained from replying to my letters."
"It was now apparent from his conduct and comments that Alan Leech was hoping to frighten Mr Rey/Hanson/Cobb into offering me once again the very same settlement terms that he had advised my wife and I to reject in 1985 by issuing a Statement of Claim for Conspiracy to Defraud that he had been strongly advised by three separate Barristers "could not be pleaded and would be struck out".
This was a gamble that Alan Leech was determined to take without any thought, care or attention to the consequences or what the resulting effect would be for me and my family.
Combined with this neglect was the careless failure to pay attention to the prosecution of the action against Fontana Holdings Inc., which he had completely ignored for four years despite our continual requests to Alan Leech to activate the action.
Alan Leech has been negligent in the conduct of the litigation matters of my wife and I and this has resulted in the following losses…
A. The benefit of the Settlement Offer made to us in
October 1985 by Fontana Holdings Inc.
B. The loss of our funds deposited at the Banco de
Bilbao, London branch
C. The costs awarded to Mr Rey which resulted in a
charge on our house, impending eviction with distress,
anxiety & misery."
In her reply on 8th May Miss Nickson asked for copies of two letters which
had been referred to in the note. Mr Fox sent the two letters, one of them
being Mr Leech's letter dated 23rd October 1985, by return.
"would need to depend largely on the ten-page note. That was the only documentary material before Wellers that might arguably have put them on notice of the lost settlement claim." (52)
"By a letter dated 23 October 1985 Mr Leech further advised Mr Fox in writing about the potential difficulties with the draft settlement terms. However Mr Leech in fact took little or no steps to negotiate any revisions to the draft agreement and by a letter dated 28 October 1985 TSW withdrew Fontana's offer.
In summary, the Foxes' case against the Respondents was that:
(a) As a result of Mr Leech's negligent advice not to
accept the settlement offer in October 1985 they lost
the settlement;
(b) Had Mr Leech advised them properly, the Foxes would
have entered into the settlement agreement proposed
and agreed in principle by Hanson and Fontana …. and
would have received all of the monies due under it;…"
"(a) Mr Fox's case was that when he saw Mr Leech on 15
October 1985, he was advised by him in the clearest
possible terms not to sign the proposed agreement and
that during the course of the said meeting Mr Leech
had telephoned Mrs Fox and given her the same
advice;
(b) Mr Leech had further advised the Foxes that:
i. he had years of experience of dealing with
Mr Rey and his associates who ultimately
controlled Fontana and that he was aware
of the tactics they might use to avoid
payments under the proposed Agreement;
ii. He was experienced in dealing with Mr
Hanson, that he had experience in litigating
against Mr Rey, who he described as a
dishonest man, and that the Foxes would
be intimidated by his approach;
iii. he was more experienced in dealing with
Rey, Hanson etc than SLP;
iv. he could secure a more favourable
settlement for the Foxes than the one
currently on offer;
(c) in reliance on those assertions, the Foxes instructed Mr
Leech to take over conduct of the matter;
(d) thereafter, Mr Leech negligently continued to advise
the Foxes against acceptance of the settlement but had
failed to secure a settlement better than that on offer or
any settlement at all which it was asserted he had
advised the Foxes he would secure;
(e) the terms of the proposed agreement sent by Mr Fox
on 16 October 1985 ….provided by way of
amendment that the bills of exchange were to be
"guaranteed for payment" by Swiss Volksbank. Such
an arrangement was acceptable to the Foxes and could
and should have been accepted on their behalf by Mr
Leech;
(f) Mr Leech in fact did nothing with regard to seeking
any improvement or adjustment to the terms of the
settlement agreement (and indeed did nothing at all)
with the end result that the agreement was lost; …."
"a. see Mr Leech's oral advice on 15th October 1985:
paras. 17 to 34, 60 to 62 of Mr Fox's statement para.
13 of p/c in Leech action; paras. 6 and 7 of Mrs Fox's
witness statement:"
b. Mr Leech's letter of 23rd October 1985 did not give
balanced or proper advice, was superficial and
contained numerous errors:…. [the numerous errors
were set out in some detail in five sub-paragraphs]
c. Thus the draft settlement was not strikingly convoluted or disingenuously worded as Mr Leech advised. The
fundamental point which Mr Leech should have understood and advised the Foxes of was that the settlement agreement contained provisos of enormous benefit to the Foxes and in particular:
i. they were to get a banker's draft for £125,000;
ii. they also had the benefit of bills of exchange
guaranteed by Swiss Volksbank and held by the
bank under standing instructions to hand them
over on the anniversary dates.
d. This was far preferable to the alternative of
commencing highly costly and speculative
litigation against Hanson and his associates.
e. ….
f. Mr Leech did nothing with regard to seeking any
improvement or adjustment to the terms of the draft settlement agreement and, indeed, did nothing at all with the end result that the agreement was lost;"
she said, in response to a question from Underhill J. that it was
"important not to take the letter as a standalone problem". She referred
to points c and d in paragraph 135 of her written opening (above) and
said that:
"The fundamental point which Mr Leech should have understood and advised the Foxes, was that the settlement was of enormous benefit – contained provisions of enormous benefit to the Foxes, in particular the banker's draft for 125, the benefit of the bills of exchange and the guarantee, which was far preferable to the alternative of commencing and pursuing the highly costly and speculative litigation against Hanson and associates.
So it is a combination of the advice that, "I will do better for you, I know these people, I will get you a better deal. This deal is no good, overstated. Let's proceed with the litigation". And then doing nothing on the settlement front at all.
So it's almost a four-step situation, and the letter by itself doesn't stand alone. It's part of the matrix…….there are neat points on the letter as a standalone, but in context it's one of a number of factors."
"which is: I will get you a deal. So there is an identified risk of the thing falling apart, but the overwhelming impression is: I will secure you a better deal than this, trust me. And Mr Leech did absolutely nothing at any stage to secure a deal for Mr Fox."
"113. I should start by saying that the substantive points made in Mr Leech's letter of 23rd October 1985, taken by themselves, seem unimpeachable. The various problems which he identified with the draft Agreement were, as discussed at para. 21 above, real. The only way of ensuring payment of the future instalments, within the framework as agreed at that date, would have been for SV's "guarantee" to take the form of an undertaking to pay in the event of default irrespective of any alleged breach of the Agreement. No such undertaking from SV had been proffered, and it was unlikely that the promised guarantee when (or if) tendered would go that far.
114. It does not however follow that the only sensible course for Mr and Mrs Fox was to reject the offer. It remained to be seen whether the SV guarantee in fact materialised and if so what its terms amounted to. And even if, as seemed likely, they did not give 100% protection, a judgment would have to be made as to whether the risks of default (which would not necessarily mean ultimate non-payment but would entail further litigation) outweighed the risks of continuing with the litigation. All agreements involving deferred payments carry some risk of default, and all agreements involving mutual obligations carry the risk that the other party will allege breach and claim damages in consequence. These risks were inevitably inherent in an agreement of the kind which Mr Fox had negotiated with Mr Farnsworth. Mr Lines and Mr Grey both believed that the risks of litigation against the Hanson interests. Thus the real question about Mr Leech's advice is not whether his analysis of the draft Agreement was wrong but whether it was negligent of him to have advised as emphatically as he apparently did that Mr Fox should seek to re-negotiate and should be prepared to litigate if re-negotiation proved impossible; and, importantly, that for those purposes he should (immediately) change solicitors.
115. I believe that there is a serious argument that that advice was indeed negligent. Mr and Mrs Fox had been receiving careful advice from competent solicitors and counsel who had had every opportunity not only to consider the Agreement but also to assess the risks of the alternative course of embarking on further litigation. Mr Leech was in no position to form any useful view on the latter element in the equation. He knew about the merits (and value) of the claim against the Hanson interests only what Mr Fox could tell him in a single meeting (supplemented by what he may have already heard from Mr Cutting and/or Mr Woods – who, however, may not have been entirely disinterested). In those circumstances, for Mr Leech to give the advice which Mr Fox says that he did may have been not just bold but reckless. It is arguable that any prudent solicitor should have advised at least that Mr and Mrs Fox should continue to retain SLP until the terms of the SV guarantee were known, and should have taken advantage of the interval to acquaint himself more fully with the real prospects of the potential claim against the Hanson interests. Mr Leech was well aware that the mere fact that he had been instructed in place of SLP might lead the Hanson interests to withdraw: he told Mr Fox so in the letter of 23rd October. The fact that he warned him of that risk, even if he did so before the die was cast (as to which there is no evidence), would not necessarily be enough to "save" his substantive advice if that was otherwise negligent.
116. Even if it was not negligent for Mr Leech to give the advice which he did between 15th and 23rd October, there is the further question of his communications, or the lack of them, with TSW in the days following Mr Fox's decision to instruct him. As explored in para. 34 above, the facts are obscure. But if Mr Leech did indeed make no attempt to contact TSW, thus leaving the negotiations effectively in limbo at a crucial point, that too was arguably negligent. Whatever the deficiencies of the draft Agreement, the priority, from the point of view of Mr Fox's interests, was to see if they could be remedied; and it appears that that was what Mr Leech told Mr Fox he intended to do."
"122. That depends on what they were told by, or should reasonably have elicited from, Mr Fox about the events of October 1985. I can see a powerful argument that Wellers were not told enough to put them on notice of the potential claim until after the crucial date. They were initially instructed for the purpose of conducting the Fontana and Hanson litigation. Although it became clear from an early stage that the way in which that litigation had been handled gave rise to a potential claim for negligence against LL, there is nothing either in Mr Fox's witness statement for the purpose of the PJH proceedings or in the documents before me to suggest that he explicitly raised with Wellers an allegation that the advice given in October 1985 was negligent. His application for legal aid referred only to negligence in the handling of the litigation. Although the ten-page note, which Mr Fox sent to Miss Nickson in May 1991, did give Wellers an account of the events of October 1985 it fell short of clearly alleging negligent advice or raising the lost settlement claim. It was not until May 1993 that he explicitly did so.
123. On careful consideration, however, I am not prepared to say that there was no real prospect that a claim against Wellers could have succeeded. I think that it is at least arguable that Mr Fox's account in the ten-page note of the advice which he was given in October 1985 should have put Wellers on notice that there might be grounds for criticising that advice and that it was necessary carefully to go over what had happened with Mr Fox. (In this connection it is interesting to note that on reading the ten-page note Miss Nickson did in fact ask for, and receive, a copy of Mr Leech's letter of 23rd October; but she does not appear to have pursued her enquiries further.) If that point is reached, it almost certainly follows that Wellers should have appreciated that any such review needed to be conducted before the end of October 1991. If there had been a focused discussion of the point, either between Mr Fox and Miss Nickson or in an earlier conference with Mr Batcup, it is likely that the criticisms which Mr Fox eventually made in May 1993 would have been raised earlier and that appropriate advice about limitation given would have been given. Mr Stewart emphasised to me that Mr Fox was a man who knew his own mind and that if he had wanted to make a claim against LL based on negligent advice in October 1985 he would have done so. But even clear-thinking and decisive clients need to have their minds focused by their lawyers. The germ of the complaint which emerged in May 1993 was present in the ten-page note: it is arguable that Miss Nickson should have spotted the claim that was latent in Mr Fox's criticisms even if he had not yet spotted it himself."
"is full and explicit and prima facie the best evidence of [Mr Leech's] definitive and considered advice on the matters which it covers."
It was also, on its face and on Mr Fox's own account in the ten-page note, the best evidence of what Mr Leech's earlier oral advice to Mr Fox had been. There is nothing in either the ten-page note or the letter to suggest that Mr Leech might have given other, erroneous, oral advice in October 1985. The letter said in terms that Mr Fox appreciated that the negotiations might well not proceed if he changed solicitors to Mr Leech.
"55. Mr Fox was very disappointed by Mr Wadsworth's
advice on the Hanson action and confirmed that he
would like a consultation in order to discuss that
advice. He also, however, saw the consultation as an
opportunity to raise a further issue. On 18th May he
wrote to Wellers as follows:
At our forthcoming meeting with Mr Wadsworth QC I
would like to obtain his opinion on the fateful meeting
I had with Alan Leech on the 16th [sic] October 1985
and if the advice he gave me was negligent and in
breach of his duty of care.
I have tried to abbreviate the matter to the enclosed
single page statement which may or may not help.
However, I will certainly not refer to this subject at the
meeting if you do not approve or consider it
unhelpful."
Underhill J. said that the enclosure was a one-page statement along similar (though not identical) lines to the passage from the ten-page note which I have set out at paragraphs 29 and 30 above:
"It contained no explicit criticism of Mr Leech's advice not to settle on the terms of the draft Agreement; but of course the covering letter made it quite plain that Mr Fox was raising – for the first time in unambiguous terms – a potential allegation of negligence on the part of LL in October 1985 and thus in practice the lost settlement claim." (55)
"Leading Counsel did not think that Leech had been negligent in advising Mr Fox to reject the offer of settlement in the Hanson matter."
Underhill J said that it was unclear what material Mr Wadsworth had about the events in 1985 (57), but he could be confident "that he did not have the issues as fully explored with him as I have." (119)
"76. I do not believe that the Statement of Claim raised, or was intended by Mr Batcup to raise, an overt claim that the advice given by Mr Leech in October 1985 was negligent, or that the settlement offer represented by the draft Agreement was lost as a result of that negligent advice. I believe that Mr Batcup intended only overtly to plead a claim along the lines of the ten-page note – that is that, having advised Mr Fox to reject the offer, Mr Leech was under a duty to achieve a better result by progressing both the Fontana and Hanson action, and that he failed to do so. That pleading may not be entirely logical, since Mr Leech would have been under a duty to handle both claims competently whether or not he had advised rejection of a settlement previously offered, but one can see how, that fact might be said, at least rhetorically, in some way to intensify his obligations., And the "lost" amount of the offer would remain relevant on this basis as a measure of the amount lost by LL's negligence."
He continued in paragraph 77:
"77. However, Mr Batcup would – and in any event certainly should – have been aware that the case as so pleaded fell short of the claim that Mr Fox wished to advance, i.e. a case of negligent advice in October 1985 leading to the loss of the offer at that time. That would (or should) have been apparent to him from head 1 of Mr Fox's "Matters for Statement of Claim" note, possibly reinforced by the further discussion in the two conferences which he had had (see paras. 68 and 72 above); and such a claim was indeed made in the general indorsement. He would of course also have been aware that any such claim was prima facie statute-barred. It is true that he had never clearly been asked to advise on that question, nor had he done so; but the point was as plain as a pikestaff."
"1. The loss of the settlement offer made by Fontana Holdings Inc in 1985 which was rejected by reason of the recommendation of Mr Alan Leech but which was revealed as being negligent advice made without due care and attention to the best interests of Mr & Mrs Fox."
Heads 2 and 3 were claims for the loss of the amount secured by the Mareva in the Fontana action, and for Mr Fox's liability to costs in the Hanson action. Head 4 was a general claim for damages for distress.
Underhill J. said this about head 1:
"Thus Mr Fox was quite explicitly seeking to revive the lost settlement claim which he had first clearly adumbrated in his note for Mr Wadsworth (see para. 55 above). Again, the allegation of negligence is completely unparticularised, and the formulation "which was revealed as" may suggest that at least part of Mr Fox's thinking, as in the ten-page note, may have been that the decision to reject the offer was only "wrong" because of Mr Leech's subsequent incompetence. Nevertheless, it is on its face a clear allegation of negligent advice in October 1985." (62)
"This was a two-page document, clearly drafted by Mr Fox himself, giving a rather fuller account of the events of October 1985 than had previously been given in the ten-page note or the document supplied to Mr Wadsworth, though along similar lines. Like those, it did not make any explicit allegation of negligence. There is however a clearly detectable undercurrent of criticism, partly to the effect that Mr Leech had been over-emphatic and overbearing in his advice but partly again to the effect that he had made promises about how he would proceed if the settlement did not go ahead on which he then failed to deliver. Although the Instructions did not explicitly ask Mr Batcup to consider including in the writ, or to advise on, a claim that Mr Leech gave negligent advice which resulted in the settlement being lost, I think that such a request could clearly be inferred from the terms of those enclosures, and most particularly from head 1 of "Matters for Statement of Claim"." (65)
"The Plaintiff's claim is for damages and interest thereon pursuant to Section 35A of the Supreme Court Act 1981, against the Second Defendants, a firm of solicitors, and the First Defendant a partner in the said firm for loss and damage for negligence and/or breach of contract as solicitors for the Plaintiffs, suffered as a result of negligent advice between 1985 and 1991 in proceedings eventually issued in the Chancery Division under Ch 1988 F No 2360 and in the Queens Bench Division under 1984 F No 18, on behalf of the Plaintiffs whereby inter alia the Plaintiffs:-
(i) Lost a settlement offered by parties to the litigation;
(ii) Sustained losses of fees paid to the Defendants and to
counsel for an inadequately pleased case;
(iii) Sustained losses for costs orders made against the
Plaintiffs in favour of parties wrongly or negligently
joined to the said actions at a time when the Plaintiffs
should have had the benefit of being legally aided;
(iv) Failed to ensure the actions were proceeded with, with
due diligence and expedition and in compliance with
directions of the Court so that a Mareva injunction in
the Queen's Bench action was discharged on the 21st
July 1989 so that funds frozen were lost to the
Plaintiffs;
(v) Failed to ensure the Plaintiffs were at all stages legally
aided in the said proceedings."
"In my view, though it is (perfectly properly) wholly unparticular, in the light of Mr Batcup's instructions as summarised above, head (1) can only have been intended by him to refer to negligent advice given by Mr Leech in October 1985 leading to the loss of a settlement available at that time." (66)
This conclusion illustrates the dangers of hindsight. Having defined "the lost settlement claim" in a particular way, and having concluded that head (1) was Mr Fox's attempt to revive that "lost settlement claim", it is then said that head (i) in the general indorsement can only have been intended to refer to that claim. Head (i) in the general indorsement is, however, entirely consistent with the complaint in the ten-page note that the settlement was "lost" because Mr Leech, having advised Mr and Mrs Fox to reject the settlement agreement, failed to obtain a better result by litigation or negotiation. Such an interpretation of the general indorsement is the more likely not merely because it is consistent with the ten-page note but also because it is consistent with what Underhill J. found to have been Mr Batcup's intention when pleading the Statement of Claim a year later:
"Mr Batcup intended only overtly to plead a claim along the lines of the ten-page note – that is that, having advised Mr Fox to reject the offer, Mr Leech was under a duty to achieve a better result by progressing both the Fontana and Hanson actions and failed to do so". (76)
"somewhat fuzzy formulation of the pleading is that Mr Batcup had decided that to plead the lost settlement claim in overt terms would inevitably flag up that it was statute-barred but that he could in practical terms keep it in play by pleading the essential facts as if they were material to a loss which continued beyond July 1989; that is indeed broadly the explanation he himself gives in his first witness statement (see paragraph 38) and repeated in cross-examination." (77)
"The case I formulated as to the lost settlement claim was that Mr Leech had been negligent in that he "continued to advise against acceptance of the settlement, but failed to secure a settlement better than that on offer". This formulation created a potential way around limitation in that it could be argued that it was not any original rejection of a settlement offer that was the issue, but Mr Leech's failure thereafter to secure a settlement as an alternative to the issue of further proceedings or the lack of follow-up in the Fontana action."
"31. First, when I came to draft the relevant endorsement for the Writ for the claim against Mr Leech, I did include a criticism against Mr Leech that related to a failure to obtain settlement of the Hanson action (although I describe below why this criticism was not the same as the contention that Mr Fox later came to make). However difficult a client Mr Fox might have been I admit I had some sympathy with him over his dealings both with Hanson Interests and some members of the legal profession in the previous ten years. I was also concerned as to whether I might have received all the relevant papers, but that is not to say that I had any reason to suppose that Wellers had failed diligently to pass on to me all the papers they had been given by their client.
32. So, it was as a precautionary step that I included in the endorsement to the Writ a claim based on a failure to achieve settlement of the Hanson action.
33. The second point is that I am sure, either before or after the written instructions to me of 30th June 1995, I did discuss with Mr Simister the risk that a claim against Mr Leech based on a failure to achieve early settlement might be statute barred. Indeed, it seemed that Mr Fox was already aware of his problem.
34. That said, I did consider it the right course to preserve this ground of claim against Mr Leech by including it in the Writ. From now on in this statement, I will use the term 'the lost settlement claim' to refer to this ground of claim against Mr Leech. However, I describe below how I came to formulate that claim in the Statement of Claim and how the claim changed in focus following the service of Mr Leech's Defence." (emphasis added)
"129. From at least the receipt of his instructions dated 30th June 1995 onwards Mr Batcup was, and in any event should have been, aware that the lost settlement claim formed part of the claim which Mr. Fox wished to bring against LL. That was apparent in particular from the terms of the "Matters for Statement of Claim" note included with those instructions: .... His understanding to this effect is apparent (though admittedly not always readily apparent) in the way that he pleaded the case….. It preceded, and was independent of, the introduction by Mr Fox in September 1996 of his allegations about Mr Leech's concealment of the revised draft of the settlement offer."
" The Plaintiffs were unaware until on or about the 14th September 1996 that the First Defendant had received a second draft of the Agreement (referred to in paragraphs 12 and 13 of the Statement of Claim herein) which had resulted from further negotiations between Mr Lines of SLP and Mr Thomas of Titmuss Sainer & Webb on the 15th October 1985. They believed the advice they received was as to the first draft and were denied the opportunity of considering and accepting the terms as amended."
71. Underhill J. considered that the terms of the Reply:
"confirm[ed] that Mr Batcup was in late 1996 hoping, by one means or another and despite the absence of any explicit pleading, to advance the lost settlement claim: he appreciated that that claim was prima facie statute-barred, but it now appeared that there was a possible answer to the limitation defence." (83)
This conclusion overlooks the distinction between the lost settlement claim as defined by Underhill J. – negligent advice in October 1985 – and the lost settlement claim that Mr Batcup had in mind when drafting the Writ and Statement of Claim. Put simply, that lost settlement claim was Mr Leech's failure after the settlement "offer" had been withdrawn to obtain a better deal for Mr and Mrs Fox by litigation or further negotiation. It was arguable that the time limit for such a lost settlement claim would have expired before 19th July 1989 if the Court took the view that, realistically, the chances of obtaining a better deal receded as Mr Leech's delay in pursuing the Fontana and Hanson actions lengthened. The alleged concealment by Mr Leech of the later drafts of the settlement agreement was a wholly new, and as it turned out wholly inaccurate, allegation by Mr Fox, but understandably it assumed a considerable importance in the minds of PJH and Mr Batcup at the time. WWH served a Request for Further and Better Particulars.
"After the Plaintiffs had disinstructed their former solicitors SLP on or around 16th October 1985 the First Defendant received from SLP a substantially revised form of the proposed form of Agreement to be entered into between Mr Fox and Fontana Holdings Inc. The revised terms had been negotiated between Mr Lines of SLP and Mr Thomas of TSW in a telephone conversation on 15th October 1985 and were incorporated in a second draft Agreement.
The First Defendant failed to notify the Plaintiffs of the terms of the second draft Agreement or to submit a copy of the same to the Plaintiffs for their consideration. The revised terms of the Agreement dealt with the defects which had concerned the First Defendant on 15th October 1985 and which had caused the First Defendant to advise the Plaintiff to reject the terms of the original draft Agreement, the terms of which were acceptable to the Plaintiffs, and upon which they could have proceeded to reach a negotiated settlement with Fontana Holdings Inc.
Furthermore, in a letter the First Defendant wrote to the Plaintiffs on the 23rd October 1985 and, in addition, a letter that the First Defendant prepared, drafted and instructed the Plaintiffs to send to the Law Society on the 19th December 1985, the First Defendant made no reference at all to the revised form of Agreement and improved terms and concentrated on quoting the terms contained in the first draft of the Agreement as a justification for the advice which he gave to the Plaintiffs on the 15th October 1995.
The First Defendant, upon receiving instructions to act for the Plaintiffs, should have taken steps to conclude the terms of the proposed Agreement to be entered into between Mr Fox and Fontana Holdings Inc. to the best possible advantage of the Plaintiffs."
It will be noted that it was not being alleged that Mr Leech's advice on 15th October 1985 was wrong. It was alleged that, having subsequently received the later drafts of the settlement agreement, which dealt with the defects which had concerned him on 15th October 1985, Mr Leach had failed to tell Mr Fox about them, and had failed to refer to them in his letter dated 23rd October 1985.
74. Mr Susman QC's involvement
Mr Susman was instructed to advise in consultation on WWH's application for
the trial of a preliminary issue. He was provided with a bundle of the pleadings
in the claim against Mr Leech, but he was not sent the full papers available to
PJH. The consultation took place on 22nd August 1997. Underhill J. said in
paragraph 90 of the judgment that "the main focus of the consultation was Mr
Leech's pending application rather than the ultimate prospects of the action, and
definitive advice on the merits was not required". Underhill J. noted the
following points about the consultation:
"(1) It seems, in particular from Mr Susman's note, that he
understood the "essence" of the claims pleaded at
paras. 7-22 of the Statement of Claim to be that "the
Defendant was instructed because he indicated that he
could procure a better offer, but he failed to do so, and
failed to progress the action at all". That of course
broadly reflects my own analysis of the pleading ….it
does not cover any claim that Mr Leech's advice in
October 1985 was itself negligent. His advice was that
the claim as so understood ought not to be held to be
statute-barred because damage would not crystallise
until the Fontana and/or Hanson actions collapsed."
(2) It seems, however, that Mr Susman at least considered
the possibility of a claim based on negligent advice in
October 1985. He is recorded in Ms Hartwell's note of
the consultation as saying:
1985 - contractual lim. Has well expired. Would
need to commence by
1991 - contract lim. gone.
It is hard to make sense of that statement except on the
basis that Mr Susman was addressing, however
parenthetically and briefly, a claim that the advice
given by Mr Leech in October 1985 was negligent.
There is nothing surprising about his doing so, given
the terms of the Reply and of the Further and Better
Particulars which he will have seen.
(3) Ms Hartwell also notes someone – apparently either
Mr Susman or Mr Batcup – saying:
Loss of deal (Fontana) – one view that this had long
since gone
The natural interpretation of this is that it is at least
well arguable that any claim based on the loss of the
settlement offer was now statute-barred.
(4) There was some discussion of the terms of the
settlement offer made by the Hanson interests in
October 1985 and of the different drafts. The
discussion was in the context of the "knowledge" and
s. 32 answers to the limitation point pleaded in the
Reply. The note is not explicit as to what the cause of
action which those answers might or might not "save"
was understood to be.
(5) Mr Susman is recorded in Ms Hartwell's note as
giving his view that there was a "good claim for £70k
– but highly speculative [claim] for the alleged half a
million". The "half a million" is a reference to the lost
settlement offer. Read by itself that need not be a
reference to the lost settlement claim, since the
settlement amount had been pleaded by Mr Batcup as a
measure of the value of the lost Fontana action; but in
the context of the earlier references it seems more
likely that the lost settlement claim was being referred
to. If so, the note does not state why Mr Susman
described it as "speculative"; but the most obvious
problem about it was that it was prima facie statute-
barred, and Mr Susman had not been asked, or put in a
position, to advise definitely on the merits of the claim.
In my view it is clear from those references that Mr Susman and Mr Batcup and Ms Hartwell, understood that the lost settlement claim in the sense that I have defined it at para. 44 above was part of the claim that Mr Fox wished to pursue."
"1985 -- contractual lim. Has well expired. Would need
to commence by
1991 -- contract lim gone."
in the context of Mr Leech's continuing failure since October 1985 to secure Mr Fox a better deal by one means or another, since there was a danger that the Court would take the view that the prospects of such a deal would have rapidly diminished as Mr Leech allowed time to pass after October 1985.
"it is confirmed by his note of 24th November 1997 (see para. 96) and by the way in which he analysed and presented the claim in the period leading up to the trial in 1999 (see para. 99). So far as the latter points are concerned, they of course post-date the relevant period, and I accept that by the time that Mr Susman came to prepared the opening he had much fuller papers than he had had in 1997; but the fuller detail which was available was not such as fundamentally to change the nature of the claim. It is true that Mr Susman, like Mr Batcup in the pleadings fought shy, in his drafting both of Ms Hartwell's affidavit in 1997 and of the opening in 1999, of explicitly advancing such a claim; but there were particular tactical reasons for taking that course."
"On 24th November 1997 Ms Hartwell telephoned Mr Susman to discuss a problem which had arisen with Mr Fox who was asking PJH to instruct Mr Lines not to speak to WWH and also seemed to be wanting to influence the substance of his evidence. Because the issue was evidently a delicate one Mr Susman made a note of his advice about how that problem should be dealt with. But he then went on to say something about the impact of Mr Lines's evidence on the merits of the claim. His note reads:
[6] I said that even if Mr Leech did not conceal the offer from Mr Fox, the allegation remained that Mr Leech advised him not to accept it. That was the originally pleaded case, and in my view remained a good case of negligence.
That characterisation of the claim is inconsistent with Mr Susman's earlier analysis of the "essence" of the case (see para. 90 (1) above) because it appears to treat the "originally pleaded case" as focusing not on LL's failures between 1985 and 1991 but on the advice given by Mr Leech in October 1985. It is fair to bear in mind that Mr Susman was writing this note without access to the papers (although the hearing had only been some six weeks previously). It was also written currente calamo and it may be no more an ill-expressed version of the point that, having advised Mr Fox to reject the offer, LL were under a duty so to handle the litigation as to secure a better offer. But on balance I think that it evidences a recognition on the part of Mr Susman that Mr Fox regarded Mr Leech's advice in October 1985 as negligent and that allegation, however ambiguously pleaded, was one which was intended to be advanced in the action so far as possible. That is consistent with the comments recorded from the consultation on 22nd August (see para. 90 (2)-(3) and (5)) and – as will appear – with how Mr Susman in due course sought to present the claim at trial."
"Taken literally [paragraph 6 of the note] is clearly wrong, and is contradictory of my evidence. It is also in contradiction to everything else I had done up to that point."
Underhill J. recognised that to interpret the note as a recognition by Mr Susman that Mr Fox wished to pursue the lost settlement claim would be inconsistent with the "originally pleaded case", the "essence" of which Mr Susman had correctly understood on 22nd August 1997, and which did not include such a claim.
"If it goes wrong and you get nothing ? that will be the end of it. No appeal. Unless you have some hope with Wellers ? will lose everything. Emphasise the fact that you may get nothing."
Paragraph 98 of the judgment continues:
"Mr Susman accepted in cross-examination that the reference to "some hope with Wellers" was plainly a reference to the possibility of suing Wellers for failing to advise him to issue proceedings earlier in relation to the parts of the claim that were statute-barred, i.e. the lost settlement claim."
"Real allegation is that Leech did nothing"
"1985 Deal on table
You know about it
You didn't accept – negligently advised
that he said he would chase and pursue.
He did none of those things"
"They will argue that you suffered damage
From 1985 ? had until 1991. Didn't commence
until 1995. Negligent in not pursuing Fontana action."
(emphasis added)
"The compromise proposed by the Hanson Interests fairly represented the value of the Claims, and Swiss Volksbank's acceptance and/or guarantee of payment of the bills of exchange was an adequate safeguard for Mr and Mrs Fox, and Mr Leech should have told them so."
"Leech's letter of 23/10 refers to Swiss Volksbank Guarantee
In statement you say something different
Went through statement with Mr Fox
- Mr Fox not saying that he hadn't seen terms of agreement with Swiss Volksbank – but hadn't actually seen typed version of the agreement….
- In 1996 – found the typed agreement – looked more solid than what I had seen before."
Lord Justice Dyson
Lord Justice Sedley
"You are suggesting that it was my obligation to tell Mr Fox that he might have an action against somebody who I thought had not been negligent for losing something which I never thought he had. I don't think that was my obligation."
I consider that answer to have been legally and factually sound.
Note 1 References in parenthesis are references to the paragraph numbers in Underhill J’s judgment. [Back]