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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> The Secretary of State for Business, Innovation And Skills v Weston & Anor [2014] EWHC 2933 (Ch) (05 September 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2014/2933.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 2933 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
The Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Brandon Weston (1) and David Christopher Williams (2) |
Defendants |
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The First Defendant appeared in person
Ali Tabari (directly instructed) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 22 July 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ David Cooke:
Factual background
The Crown Court proceedings
"I refer to our previous correspondence in this matter and I would advise that as a result of the current investigation undertaken the Secretary of State does not propose to take disqualification proceedings against you pursuant to section 6 of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986.
[She then set out the relevant wording of that section]
Accordingly if, in the future, the Secretary of State should learn of any unfit conduct relating to this company it could be included in any disqualification proceedings brought in respect of this or any future company failure.
In the light of the criminal proceedings currently being taken against you, I refer to section 2 of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986. This section makes provision for the court to make a disqualification order against a person convicted of an indictable offence. The section allows for a disqualification order of up to 15 years and is a matter for the court to decide. The decision not to take action against you under section 6 does not have any bearing on the decision of the court.
I thank you for the assistance provided by you during the course of my investigation. "
" In all the circumstances, bearing in mind that it is conceded by the prosecution that if I was to impose any disqualification it should be at the lower end of the scale, it seems to me that this is not a case where I should disqualify either of these defendants. Indeed it seems to me it smacks of perhaps kicking a dog whilst he is down. Both of these men have suffered, and suffered significantly, for their dishonesty. And the sooner they rehabilitate themselves, in the eyes of the public, the better it is not only for them and their families, but also (in my principal consideration) for the general public as a whole. "
Issues before this court
The law
"2 Disqualification on conviction of indictable offence
(1) The court may make a disqualification order against a person where he is convicted of an indictable offence … in connection with the promotion, formation, management, liquidation or striking off of a company...
(2) "The court" for this purpose means—
(a) any court having jurisdiction to wind up the company in relation to which the offence was committed, or
(b) the court by or before which the person is convicted of the offence, or …
(3) The maximum period of disqualification under this section is—
(a) …
(b) ..; 15 years."
"6 Duty of court to disqualify unfit directors of insolvent companies
(1) The court shall make a disqualification order against a person in any case where, on an application under this section, it is satisfied—
(a) that he is or has been a director of a company which has at any time become insolvent … and
(b) that his conduct as a director of that company… makes him unfit to be concerned in the management of a company."
For the purposes of this section "the court" means either the court by which the company is being wound up or the court which would have jurisdiction to wind it up. Schedule 1 sets out a non- exclusive list of matters to be taken into account in deciding whether a director is "unfit".
"[18] I have been told that (not surprisingly) this sort of situation (criminal and civil disqualification orders potentially overlapping) is not uncommon. There are reported and unreported cases in which it is apparent that civil proceedings have continued after s 2 disqualification orders have been made in relation to the respondents to criminal proceedings (for example, Secretary of State for Trade & Industry v Tjolle [1998] BCLC 333, [1998] BCC 282 in which it can be seen that a 10 year disqualification under s 2 was followed by a 15 year disqualification under s 6). However, there is no authority which in terms addresses the points raised by Mr Ayres. Accordingly I have to approach this matter as one of principle. It seems to me that the following principles and factors should be applied and considered in resolving the issues which arise in this case.
(i) I do not think that the doctrine of former recovery is applicable bearing in mind the different parties to the two sets of proceedings, their different natures, the different interests of the two "prosecutors" (for want of a better word) involved and the two different statutory jurisdictions involved. I can see how the doctrine, in its autrefois convict form, might apply if one disqualification under s 2 was sought to be followed by another s 2 disqualification based on the same facts. That, however, is not the case where the clash of proceedings is between criminal proceedings and civil proceedings under s 6...
(ii) Nor do I think that the doctrine of double jeopardy applies. The operation of the doctrine in relation to civil proceedings was considered in Saeed v GLC [1986] IRLR 2. In that case an acquittal on a charge of assault did not bar a domestic tribunal disciplinary charge based on the same alleged assault. Popplewell J cited Connolly v Director of Public Prosecutions [1964] AC 1254, [1964] 2 All ER 401, where there are dicta which refer to the impropriety of trying a man twice for the same crime and said:
"Mr Geddes points out, and I accept, that double jeopardy cannot apply as between criminal and civil proceedings."
I apply the same principles.
(iii) The correct principles to apply are those relating to abuse of process. That was the basis of the consideration of the Court of Appeal in Re Barings plc (No [3]) where the alternative proceedings were disciplinary proceedings…
(iv) The burden is on the party alleging abuse to establish it – Johnson v Gore Wood & Co [[2001] 2WLR 72].
(v) The jurisdiction to stay or strike out proceedings as an abuse on the footing that a point has been decided in earlier proceedings is not a jurisdiction that will be exercised lightly. I should be looking for circumstances which demonstrate that it would be:
"manifestly unfair to a party to litigation before it, or [it] would otherwise bring the administration of justice into disrepute among right-thinking people,"
if I were to allow the present proceedings to continue – Hunter v Chief Constable of West Midlands [1982] AC 529 at page 526, cited by Waller LJ in Re Barings plc (No 3) at page 257.
(vi) This point is even stronger where the person who is sought to be debarred in the second set of proceedings was not even a party to the first set. While a non-coincidence of parties is not necessarily a bar to a finding of abuse, it must be an important pointer against it.
(vii) It will be essential to examine:
"whether the issues upon which the court will need to adjudicate in the present proceedings are the same, or substantially the same, as those which have already been investigated and adjudicated upon in the [criminal proceedings]." (per Chadwick LJ in re Barings plc (No [3]) [1999] 1 BCLC 226 at page 253)
(viii) I must bear in mind that the Secretary of State is the person to whom Parliament has entrusted the task of considering whether to seek disqualification orders in the public interest under s 6. This court is not entitled to substitute its own view as to the desirability of continuing proceedings for the view taken by the Secretary of State – see again Re Barings plc (No [3]) [1999] 1 BCLC 226 at p 252. I can only intervene if the continuation of the proceedings amounts to an abuse of the process, and the public interest factor must be borne heavily in mind in considering that question. In this context it is again important to remember that the Secretary of State was not a party to the criminal proceedings; nor was he given an opportunity to appear. A finding that the Secretary of State's continued pursuit of proceedings that he considers to be in the public interest is an abuse of the process on the basis of findings in proceedings to which he was not a party would be a strong finding. It might not be absolutely inconceivable; but it would require a very strong and clear case. It is no answer to say, as Mr Ayres says, that the prosecuting authorities and the Secretary of State are both "emanations of the state". That might be an accurate description is some contexts, but they are emanations with different functions and with different interests in mind.
(ix) It is important to bear in mind the difference in focus and emphasis of the criminal proceedings when compared to the civil proceedings. The purpose of the criminal proceedings is to consider the evidence with a view to determining whether the crime has been committed. That will usually involve considering the existence or non-existence of dishonesty. If there is a conviction, then disqualification may be considered as part of the sentencing process, but the focus of the criminal proceedings is such that any detailed consideration of the conduct of the directors in question, so far as it bears on their unfitness to be directors, is unlikely to take place during the trial and will arise, if at all, at the stage of sentencing by which time all the evidence has been given. The disqualification will be considered by reference to the facts germane to the conviction. Civil proceedings under s 6 are different. The whole focus of those proceedings is on the conduct of the directors and what it says about their fitness or unfitness to be directors, and that focus exists throughout the proceedings. One also has to bear in mind the differing standards of proof in the two sets of proceedings. There may be various things not proved to the criminal standard which might be provable to the civil standard in the civil proceedings, so that decisions in the former might justifiably be revisited in the latter.
(x) It seems to me that a combination of the last two points means that in most cases it is going to be unlikely that a disqualification in criminal proceedings will make concurrent civil proceedings an abuse of process. It is likely to be only in clear cases, which can clearly be said to be on all fours with each other, that it might be said that the criminal proceedings have covered all the bases in a way which makes the civil proceedings otiose and oppressive…"
"[16] Mr Ayres also … relied on the doctrine of former recovery. This doctrine is apparently an aspect of the doctrine of merger. According to Spencer Bower, The Doctrine of Res Judicata, 3rd Edn at page 221, the notions of former recovery in civil cases and autrefois convict in criminal cases are both aspects of the same thing. They prevent a second judgment on the same cause of action, or a second conviction for the same offence."
"Chadwick LJ referred ([1999] 1 BCLC 226 at 253) to the decision of the Court of Appeal in Ashmore v British Coal Corp [1990] 2 All ER 981, [1990] 2 QB 338 and to certain other decisions, and then stated in his own words the principle. He said:
'The overriding consideration, as it seems to me, is the need to preserve public confidence in the administration of justice. The court is entitled – indeed bound – to stay the proceedings where to allow them to continue would threaten its own integrity. In the words of Lord Diplock, proceedings should be stayed where to allow them to continue would bring the administration of justice into disrepute among right-thinking people.'
In my judgment Mr Davis-White was correct in saying that the two touchstones in this field are the causing of unfairness to a party and the bringing of the law into disrepute."
"However, this is not precisely the situation which he referred to when he said that the doctrine of autrefois convict might apply if one disqualification under s 2 was sought to be followed by another s 2 disqualification based on the same facts. There has been no s 2 disqualification in this case, and for reasons which I have indicated I do not think it right to infer that there was a positive decision by the criminal court not to impose a disqualification although it is, of course, a fact that the criminal court did not do so."
In this case of course there has been a positive decision by the criminal court to refuse an order under s2.
"Your Honour has made no reference to disqualification under the Act, so I take it your Honour makes no order?"
to which the judge replied:
"I think, Mr. Henderson, I was concentrating primarily on achieving proper balance on sentencing. I think it seems unlikely, given the time that has elapsed, that any of these defendants is going to be involved in running a company again. I think in all the circumstances I will not make an order, and certainly in the case of these defendants I think it will be no kindness to bring them back to the dock for imposing such an order."
"I construe those observations… as indicating that at a point in time when he at least thought he had the power to add a disqualification order to the sentence he had just imposed, he considered doing so and determined not to do so."
I think myself the inference from the passage quoted must be that the judge had been previously referred to the possibility of disqualification "under the Act" but that this initially slipped his mind because he had been concentrating on the correct balance of sentence. He no doubt considered the matter when reminded of it, but plainly only in the briefest manner. By then the defendants had left the dock and he must have felt some pressure not to put them through the inconvenience of being brought back, when the possible need to do so arose from his own omission.
"…the provisions of s2 of the 1986 Act, if they are to mean anything at all, must mean that this court does have jurisdiction to impose a disqualification order at least in circumstances where the convicting court has not. If it does not have power to impose it in such circumstances, it never has power to do so at all, and yet the section makes quite clear that "the court" includes this court.
A possible circumstance where the jurisdiction might be exercised, without [reaching as wide a conclusion] as the one I have just suggested is if it were limited to the case where the convicting court had merely failed to exercise its jurisdiction by oversight or mistake and had not considered doing so. But I reject that as a possible construction of s2 because I cannot think that, without express words, a jurisdiction would be conferred on this court based on the assumption that other courts of competent jurisdiction failed to exercise their duty…
The question of whether [an] application under s4 or s6 may amount to an abuse of process in circumstances where there had been a prior conviction giving rise to the opportunity in the convicting court to impose a disqualification order has been considered in two cases by this court. [In Rayna Mr. Anthony Mann QC] came to the conclusion that the matters relied upon under s6 were wider and went further than those that had been considered by… the convicting court under s2… He said at p12 of his judgment that
"It is likely to be only in clear cases which can be said to be on all fours with each other that it might be said that the criminal proceedings have covered all the bases in a way which makes the civil proceedings otiose and oppressive."
It might be derived from that approach that a proceeding by the Secretary of State under s2 after an order has been made under s2 must necessarily be a proceeding so completely on all fours because both applications must proceed on the basis of the conviction and the facts founding the conviction that the civil proceedings would be, in Mr. Mann's words "otiose and oppressive". He indeed said… that he could see how the doctrine of former recovery "in its autrefois [convict] form" might apply if one disqualification under s2 was sought to be followed by another s2 disqualification based on the same facts… [but] I would not follow his view as formulated for the reasons which I will seek to set out… [I] note [he] was dealing obiter with a circumstance which differed not only from the case before Mr. Mann but also from the case before me, where of course no disqualification order was in fact made…
The case which I have to consider differs from [Denis Hilton] in two important particulars. First, the application…is made under s2, the same section as that under which [the criminal court had power to make a disqualification order] and secondly, as I have held, I am to treat this case as a case where the convicting court did consider the exercise of its discretion.
For the reasons that I have attempted to give, I do not think that there is a distinction to be made between oversight and refusal so far as the failure to impose a disqualification order by the convicting court is concerned…
…it seems to me that a difference between the two sections [sc between a subsequent application under s2 or s6] is a difference which should lead to no distinction as to the appropriate conclusion in regard to abuse of process.
Where the convicting court has not [made a disqualification order], the alternative court, this court, in my judgment clearly has power to do so, and for the reasons which satisfied the judges who considered the similar cases under s6 and s4, no abuse arises.
I take, however, from the words which Mr. Mann used the suggestion that it is, as it appears to me, although it is not [relevant?] for my present decision, at least highly arguable that the exercise of the power is to be by alternative courts, and if one court has exercised the power the other [is] no longer entitled to do so…"
Consideration
"It is highly desirable that the criminal courts should be aware of this guidance, for it is self evident that civil and criminal courts should be applying the same standards: the purpose of disqualification (to protect the public from the activities of persons unfit to be concerned in the management of a company) is the same in both kinds of court."
"In Hunter v Chief Constable of West Midlands [1981] 3 All ER 727, [1982] AC 529 an attempt by the six men convicted of the Birmingham bombings to relitigate in civil proceedings the issue whether their confessions ought to have been received in evidence before the jury was held by the House of Lords to be an abuse. Lord Diplock began his speech in that case (with which the rest of the House agreed) as follows ([1981] 3 All ER 727 at 729, [1982] AC 529 at 536):
'My Lords, this is a case about abuse of the process of the High Court. It concerns the inherent power which any court of justice must possess to prevent misuse of its procedure in a way which, although not inconsistent with the literal application of its procedural rules, would nevertheless be manifestly unfair to a party to litigation before it, or would otherwise bring the administration of justice into disrepute among right-thinking people. The circumstances in which abuse of process can arise are very varied; those which give rise to the instant appeal must surely be unique. It would, in my view, be most unwise if this House were to use this occasion to say anything that might be taken as limiting to fixed categories the kinds of circumstances in which the court has a duty (I disavow the word discretion) to exercise this salutary power.'
Later in his speech in Hunter's case [1981] 3 All ER 727 at 733, [1982] AC 529 at 541, Lord Diplock said:
'The abuse of process which the instant case exemplifies is the initiation of proceedings in a court of justice for the purpose of mounting a collateral attack on a final decision against the intending plaintiff which has been made by another court of competent jurisdiction in previous proceedings in which the intending plaintiff had a full opportunity of contesting the decision in the court by which it was made.'
Thus, it is clear on authority that the court's inherent jurisdiction to prevent abuse of process in civil proceedings extends to cases where, notwithstanding that the doctrines of res judicata and issue estoppel are inapplicable, the circumstances are such that the issue or prosecution of proceedings would be vexatious or oppressive as amounting to an attempt to relitigate a case which has already in substance been disposed of by earlier proceedings – where, to use Lord Diplock's expression, the proceedings amount to a collateral attack on a decision in earlier proceedings. This aspect of the court's inherent jurisdiction to prevent abuses of its process is sometimes referred to as 'the double jeopardy rule'. In my judgment, however, the expression 'double jeopardy rule' is misleading in so far as it implies the existence of some absolute rule: as I see it, the question whether proceedings should be struck out or stayed on grounds of double jeopardy must remain a matter for the discretion of the court, in the light of the circumstances of each particular case. Lord Diplock's disavowal of the word 'discretion' in this context makes it clear that once the court has concluded, after weighing all the relevant circumstances, that a particular proceeding is an abuse of its process, it has a duty to act to prevent that abuse continuing. I would prefer to call the relevant principle the 'collateral attack principle', and I will use that term hereafter in this judgment."