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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 >> Pickthall v Hill Dickinson Llp & Anor [2009] EWCA Civ 543 (11 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/543.html Cite as: [2009] CP Rep 40, [2009] EWCA Civ 543, [2009] PNLR 31 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CHANCERY DIVISION
LIVERPOOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE WAKSMAN Q.C.
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
and
MR JUSTICE MANN
____________________
JASON PICKTHALL |
Respondent/ Claimant |
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- and - |
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HILL DICKINSON LLP |
Appellant/ First Defendant |
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RICHARD MARTINDALE |
Appellant/ Second Defendant |
____________________
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)
MR. W. FLENLEY (instructed by Messrs. Black Norman) for the Respondent.
Hearing date: 15th May 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
The facts
(1) As at 20th June 2007 (the date of the assignment) was the claim statute barred?
(2) If it was, should the claim be struck out as being an abuse of the process?
(3) If it should not be so struck out, is it necessary for the Claim Form to be amended to plead the fact of the assignment?
(4) If it is necessary, should the Court in its discretion allow that amendment?
a) Issue (1) was answered in the affirmative. That decision has not been challenged. In fact, Mr Flenley, who appeared for Mr Pickthall, accepted at the hearing before us that the limitation period expired on 6th February 2007.b) Issue (2) was answered in the negative. Hill Dickinson had argued that it was an abuse of process to have commenced proceedings when Mr Pickthall did not have the cause of action vested in him, and placed reliance on a line of cases (to which I refer below) which were said to demonstrate the proposition that to start proceedings without any current intention of pursuing them, or without being able to formulate the claim, was an abuse, and that it was a similar abuse to start proceedings without having the relevant cause of action in the hope that an assignment would be obtained.
c) Issue (3) was answered in the affirmative it was necessary to plead the assignment. There has been no challenge to that aspect of the decision.
d) On issue (4), the amendment should be allowed, since Hill Dickinson would suffer no prejudice if it were allowed; there was no abuse of process and the proceedings were not a nullity; it could not be said that the trustee had elected not to bring the proceedings; Mr Pickthall was not guilty of a "speculative manoeuvre" without any real intention to proceed; and it mattered not that the assignment came after the end of the limitation period. Mr Pickthall and the trustee were said to have a "close identity", and could properly be described "as two sides of the same coin".
The issues on this appeal
Were the proceedings an abuse of the process?
"[The decision below] was a decision involving the assessment of a large number of factors to which there can, in such a case, only be one correct answer to whether there is or is not an abuse of process. None the less an appellate court will be reluctant to interfere with the decision of the judge where the decision rests upon balancing such a number of factors The types of case where a judge has to balance factors are very varied and the judgments of the courts as to the tests to be applied are expressed in different terms. However, it is sufficient for the purposes of this appeal to state that an appellate court will be reluctant to interfere with the decision of the judge in the judgment he reaches on abuse of process by the balance of the factors; it will generally interfere where the judge has taken into account immaterial factors, omitted to take account of material factors, erred in principle or come to a conclusion that was impermissible or not open to him."
This was affirmed by Sir Anthony Clarke MR in Stuart v Goldberg Linde [2008] 1 WLR 823.
"If a claimant cannot do that which is necessary to prosecute the claim by setting out the basis of it, even in a rudimentary way, a claimant has no business to issue a claim form at all 'in the hope that something may turn up'. The effect of issuing a writ or claim form in such circumstances is, so the plaintiff/claimant hopes, to stop the limitation period running and thus deprive the defendant of a potential limitation defence. The plaintiff/claimant thus, unilaterally, by its own action, seeks to achieve for itself an extension of the time allowed by statute for the commencement of an action, even though it is in no position properly to formulate a claim against the relevant defendant. That must, in my judgment, be an abuse of process and one for which there can be no remedy save that of striking out the proceedings so as to deprive the claimant of its putative advantage. The illegitimate benefit hopefully achieved can only be nullified by this means. Whatever powers may be available to the court for other abuses, if this is an abuse, there is only one suitable sanction."
He went on to say at paragraph 40:
"40. Although defectively endorsed writs could be cured by subsequent statements of claim in the ordinary way, such cure depended upon the plaintiff having a known genuine cause of action at the time of the issue of the writ and the irregularity merely being the failure properly to set it out. As appears from the decisions discussed earlier, that principle is of no application where the plaintiff had no known basis for making the claim at the time when the writ was issued."
Note the reference to knowledge in that passage.
"In my opinion to issue a writ against a party even in connection with a building dispute where cross-claims may subsequently be made, when it is not intended to serve a statement of claim and where one has no reasonable evidence or grounds on which to serve a statement of claim against a particular party, is an 'abuse of the process of the court' had the structural engineers called for a statement of claim when the rate was first issued [the claimant] would have responded either by declining to serve a statement of claim and consequently having the proceedings struck out or to have served a statement of claim which they knew had no foundation. When that is the dilemma it readily becomes apparent that an improper use of the process of the court has been made."
"Good justice needs to be swift justice, and, in my opinion, the limitation periods provided for by the Limitation Act 1980 are generous. Any artificial extension of those periods needs to be fully justified."
"To my mind, at least in the absence of very special circumstances, it could hardly be suggested that it would be a proper use of the processes of the Court to issue a writ with no intention of following it up with a statement or points of claim, in circumstances where the plaintiffs were unaware of any basis on which they could bring proceedings against the defendants. The reason for this is simply that in contentious matters the Courts and Court procedures exist for the purpose of determining claims. If a plaintiff starts an action with no present intention of pursuing it, being unaware of any basis for a claim, then on the face of it that plaintiff is not using the processes of the Court for the purposes for which they were designed.
In the present case there is no doubt that the writs were issued when they were in order to avoid a possible defence of limitation. To my mind this alone would not prevent the writ from being struck out, given there was no present intention of pursuing the matter nor any known basis for the claim. Parliament has stipulated the periods within which proceedings must be begun so that unless the proceedings are begun within the relevant period (or the plaintiff can bring himself within one of the exceptions) then it is nothing to the point that he may have wished to protect the position in case something turned up at a later stage. To allow him to do so would in effect be to extend the period beyond that thought appropriate by Parliament."
"The underlying mischief is the bringing of proceedings without any intention to have them litigated; the fact that at some later stage a basis for the claim might turn up is not a justification. Nor is the fact that the Claimant seeks to protect his position with regard to limitation in case (a) a basis for the claim might turn up and (b) at that point the Claimant decides that there is good reason then to pursue a claim; that is not this case."
He distinguished Steamship Mutual in the same way:
"The abuse in that case was therefore concerned with the issue of a writ when there was no intention to prosecute it at all at least when it was issued and when the basis for any claim was not known In my judgment the case before me is clearly distinguishable from Steamship Mutual. Mr Pickthall had every intention of pursuing this claim. However he needed an assignment to do so."
Mr Pickthall's intention to pursue his claim in due course therefore, in the judge's eyes, removed the proceedings from the realms of abuse.
Amendment
"It is true that the upshot [of the amendment] will be that Mr Pickthall can pursue a claim which he did not have at the outset. But on the other hand there was no abuse of process here and in law the claim form as issued was not a nullity."
He therefore failed to take a central point into account and it falls to us to consider the exercise of the discretion afresh. For the reasons just given I would determine it against the claimant and refuse him permission to amend to plead the assignment.
Conclusions
(2) The claim should be struck out as an abuse of process, and
(4) The amendment to plead the assignment should not be allowed.
Thomas LJ : I agree.
Laws LJ: I also agree.