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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 >> Hussain v Vaswani & Ors [2020] EWCA Civ 1216 (18 September 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1216.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 1216, [2020] WLR(D) 510 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT CENTRAL LONDON
His Honour Judge Lethem
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
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RIZWAN HUSSAIN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) GULRAJ VASWANI (2) SAROJ VASWANI (3) KRITI VASWANI |
Respondent |
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Ian Rees Phillips (instructed by YVA Solicitors LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 10 September 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Arnold:
Introduction
Factual background
Grounds of appeal
First and second grounds: is imprisonment precluded by section 4 of the Debtors' Act 1869?
"(1) If a person –
(a) required by a judgment or order to do an act does not do it within the time fixed by the judgment or order; or
(b) disobeys a judgment or order not to do an act,
then, subject to the Debtors Acts 1869 and 1878 and to the provisions of these Rules, the judgment or order may be enforced by an order for committal.
…
(4) So far as applicable, and with the necessary modifications, this Section applies to undertakings given by a party as it applies to judgments or orders.
…"
"With the exceptions herein-after mentioned, no person shall be arrested or imprisoned for making default in payment of a sum of money.
There shall be excepted from the operation of the above enactment:
…
(3) Default by a trustee or person acting in a fiduciary capacity and ordered to pay by a court of equity any sum in his possession or under his control:
…
Provided, first, that no person shall be imprisoned in any case excepted from the operation of this section for a longer period than one year; and, secondly, that nothing in this section shall alter the effect of any judgment or order of any court for payment of money except as regards the arrest and imprisonment making default in paying such money."
"In my opinion the order for attachment was not in violation of the Debtors Act, because it was not for default in payment of a sum of money within the meaning of that section. The object of the Act was to prevent the imprisonment of persons for nonpayment of ordinary debts. No doubt the words used in the Act are very wide; but we must consider what was really meant by the payment of a sum of money. This order was not for the payment of a sum of money to the respondent; nor was it simply an order for the appellant to pay a sum of money into court; but there was an alternative, he was either to pay the money or to give a bond. It was argued that the mention of the bond was only subsidiary to the order for payment of the money, that the order was in effect simply an order to pay the money. I do not take that view. If the appellant had given the bond, he would have complied with the order. … The order was an order to give security, and as such was not within the 4th section of the Debtors Act …"
"The question turns upon the words of the 4th section of the Debtors Act. It is said that the appellant is within the protection of the Act, because he has made default in payment of a sum of money. But what do the words 'payment of money' in this section mean? In my opinion, they do not mean depositing a sum of money in court, to abide an order to be subsequently made. If the appellant had been ordered to pay the money to the receiver of the Court in discharge of an obligation to which he had been declared liable, that might be different. But that is not so here; he is to deposit the money in court, or to give security for it. That is not within the meaning of the words of the Act."
"This was a simple order to pay money, but it is sought to treat the default in obeying the order as a contempt of court, on the ground that the order for payment was made in pursuance of an undertaking which had been given by the plaintiff. There is however no difference between an order to pay money made in pursuance of an undertaking and any other order to pay a sum of money. It is true that the undertaking is the original ground of the liability, but attachment is never granted except for disobedience of an order to do or abstain from doing some specific thing. Here the only order that could be made in pursuance of the undertaking is to pay the money. The words of the Debtors Act, 1869 (32 & 33 Vict. c. 62), s. 4, shew that under such circumstances, if the case does not come within any of the exceptions mentioned, there can be no imprisonment for default in payment, for the money is due as a debt."
"My attention has been called to a decision of Byrne J. in Carter v. Roberts [1903] 2 Ch 312. In that case the defendant gave an undertaking as also did the plaintiff 'to pay all sums of money which shall be received by them in respect of the matters in dispute in this action to the credit of the partnership account of the plaintiff and defendant with [certain banks].' … The learned judge decided that that case was not within any exception to the Debtors Act, 1869. The undertaking in fact was merely to pay into a joint account to await the decision of the court, and with all possible respect to the learned judge it is a little difficult to see how this was an order for payment of money covered by the Debtors Act at all. Indeed the decision hardly seems to be in accord with what was said by the Court of Appeal in the case of Bates v. Bates. [He proceeded to quote from the judgment of Lindley LJ.] I am satisfied in the present case that there has been a breach of an undertaking which is within the Debtors Act, 1869, s. 4."
"[The 1939 order] contained an undertaking given by the deceased to the court to pay one-third of his income to the plaintiff, but such an undertaking has not, in my judgment, the same effect as an order to pay. An order to pay may be enforced in the same manner as a judgment; R.S.C., Ord. 42, r. 24 … An undertaking, however, is not an order. It is true that an undertaking to do or abstain from doing something other than payment of money may have the same effect as a mandatory or a restrictive injunction; for a breach of such an undertaking, like a breach of an injunction, exposes the culprit to the risk of imprisonment or possibly of sequestration or a fine. These are penal sanctions aimed at enforcing compliance with either a promise made to the court or an order of the court, as the case may be. They are not remedies the purpose of which is to compensate some other party for damage he has suffered as the result of the breach or for recovering any property or enforcing any right of his. In most cases, at any rate, an order to pay money is of a wholly different character and produces quite different results from an undertaking given to the court to pay something. In the first place an order to pay money is most usually, though not always, a consequence of the person to be paid having established a right to payment of the sum in question. The order having once been made, the court would not revoke or vary it. Where, on the other hand, no order for payment has been made but an undertaking has been given to the court to make a payment, the court could at any time upon good cause being shown release or modify the obligation under the undertaking. Secondly, any order for payment to which R.S.C., Ord. 42, r. 24, applies may be enforced by the party who has obtained it in the same manner as a judgment to the like effect. He could, for instance, recover the sum by means of levying an execution or attaching a debt. But an undertaking could not be enforced by such means. The only sanction for breach of an undertaking would be the imprisonment of the culprit or sequestration of his assets or a fine on the ground of his contempt of court. An undertaking given to the court, unless the circumstances are such that it has some collateral contractual operation between the parties concerned, confers no personal right or remedy upon any other party. The giver of the undertaking assumes thereby an obligation to the court but to nobody else."
"It seems to me that in reality, as I have said, there was probably very little between the two Lords Justices in Bates v. Bates. Both of them were saying in effect that where there is an order for the payment of money or the giving of security, but not the payment of an ordinary debt and not the payment of money directly to the claimant, then section 4 of the Debtors Act is not engaged. As it seems to me, that is the ratio of Bates v. Bates which I must follow and nothing that Purchas LJ says in Graham v. Graham casts any doubt whatever upon it."
"Mr Halpern maintains that the Debtors Act applies to the undertaking in respect of the monies drawn down under the Dragonfly Facility, because that was an undertaking to repay money to Dragonfly. I disagree. The first task is to construe the undertaking. As I have pointed out, it was given in circumstances where Mr Jones had assured the court that the funds drawn down under the facility were sitting in a separate account with Hambros and that those funds were available to be transferred to Dragonfly (subject only to there being any problem arising from the terms of the facility itself). In my judgment, the undertaking to 'procure' that the facility was discharged is to be understood as an undertaking to procure that the funds so described would be transferred to Dragonfly. There is no question, therefore, of Mr Jones being required to "pay" a debt which he owed, nor of paying anything from his own funds. Ms Felix made much of the point that the claimant would no doubt have been content if any money had been procured by Mr Jones, including from his own funds. I suspect that is correct, but there is an important difference between what the claimant would have been content with and what the undertaking, properly construed, required. The purpose of the Debtors Act is clearly not engaged in these circumstances."
Third ground of appeal: is 12 months manifestly excessive?
"37. In deciding what sentence to impose for a contempt of court, the judge has to weigh and assess a number of factors. This court is reluctant to interfere with decisions of that nature, and will generally only do so if the judge: (i) Made an error of principle; (ii) Took into account immaterial factors or failed to take into account material factors; or (iii) Reached a decision which was plainly wrong in that it was outside the range of decisions reasonably open to the judge. See Mersey Care NHS Trust v Ackroyd [2007] EWCA Civ 101 , at paras 35–36, Aldi Stores Ltd v WSP Group plc [2007] EWCA Civ 1260; [2008] 1 WLR 748, at para 16, Stuart v Goldberg Linde [2008] EWCA Civ 2; [2008] 1 WLR 823, at paras 76 and 81 and the very recent decision of this court in Liverpool Victoria Insurance Co Ltd v Zafar [2019] EWCA 392 (Civ), at para 44.
38. It follows from that approach that there will be few cases in which a contemnor will be able successfully to challenge a sentence as being excessive. If however this court is satisfied that the sentence was "wrong" on one of the above grounds, it will reverse the decision below and either remit the case to the judge for further consideration of sanction or substitute its own decision.
39. In Liverpool Victoria Insurance Co Ltd v Zafar, at para 58 this court considered the correct approach to sentencing for a contempt of court involving a false statement verified by a statement of truth. We consider that a similar approach should be adopted when—as in this case—a court is sentencing for contempt of court of the kind which involves one or more breaches of an order of the court. The court should first consider (as a criminal court would do) the culpability of the contemnor and the harm caused, intended or likely to be caused by the breach of the order. In this regard, aggravating or mitigating factors which are likely to arise for consideration will often include some of those identified by Popplewell J in the Asia Islamic Trade Finance Fund case (see para 32 above). Having determined the seriousness of the case, the court must consider whether a fine would be a sufficient penalty. If it would, committal to prison cannot be justified, even if the contemnor's means are so limited that the amount of the fine must be modest.
40. Breach of a court order is always serious, because it undermines the administration of justice. We therefore agree with the observations of Jackson LJ in the Solodchenko case (see para 31 above) as to the inherent seriousness of a breach of a court order, and as to the likelihood that nothing other than a prison sentence will suffice to punish such a serious contempt of court. The length of that sentence will, of course, depend on all the circumstances of the case, but again we agree with the observations of Jackson LJ as to the length of sentence which may often be appropriate. Mr Underwood was correct to submit that the decision as to the length of sentence appropriate in a particular case must take into account that the maximum sentence is committal to prison for two years. However, because the maximum term is comparatively short, we do not think that the maximum can be reserved for the very worst sort of contempt which can be imagined. Rather, there will be a comparatively broad range of conduct which can fairly be regarded as falling within the most serious category and as therefore justifying a sentence at or near the maximum."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Baker: