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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 >> Ravenscroft v Canal & River Trust [2016] EWHC 2282 (Ch) (14 September 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/2282.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2282 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Leigh Ravenscroft |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Canal & River Trust |
Defendant |
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Mr Christopher Stoner QC (instructed by Shoesmiths LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 1st September 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Chief Master Marsh :
Background
Mr Ravenscroft's application
i) He is largely illiterate and therefore has difficulty reading and understanding the statutory and other background material;ii) His emotional involvement with the issues make it impossible for him to deal with the matter calmly;
iii) He has no funds with which to engage professional representation and Mr Moore's agreed to provide help without any re-imbursement;
iv) Mr Moore has a great deal of relevant experience and knowledge.
"I have further agreed to do this gratis, being understanding of his straightened situation, and because I have sympathy with the feelings of a victim of very similar circumstances to my own.
His action promotes no cause of my own, seeing as I have already won my own case, and I look after no boats affected by immediately relevant legislation. I'm simply seeking to assist in that area of law, with which I have necessarily become acquainted through research in my own field. My personal interest is solely with the upholding of justice."
i) Criticism was made of Mr Moore by Hildyard J in a judgment dated 16th February 2012 in Moore –v- British Waterways Board [2012] EWHC 1175 (Ch). The judgment dealt with the costs of the claim and the judge noted at [25]:"…I have been worried that Mr Moore, although he plainly has a very real sense of mission and the need to protect his and other boaters rights, has perhaps not fully taking into account that these processes are extremely expensive, and that expense has ultimately to be borne by someone. It is not a legitimate expectation that one should be able to establish and defend ones rights at the expense of the person who is denying them; those embarking on litigation need to be aware of that, however just they may conceive their cause, they will generally be required to pay for the exercise if in the event they do not prevail in their legal claim. In my main judgment, I characterised his approach as being somewhat relentless and obstinate."ii) The CRT points to a number of costs orders which have been made against Mr Moore which he has not met and in particular to an order for costs against him which he offered to pay at the rate of just £1 per month. There remain unsatisfied costs orders in favour of the CRT against Mr Moore.
iii) Mr Moore has on several occasions posted observations about this claim on an online forum where matters of interest to boaters are posted. He based his observations about the CRT's recent defence within twenty minutes of having seen it, observing that it is "surprisingly weak" but also saying that he will have to go through the defence with Mr Ravenscroft and "pick it apart".
iv) Later posts also refer to Mr Ravenscroft's determination to keep the issues of this claim in the public eye and he refers to other possible candidates who might act as a McKenzie friend for Mr Ravenscroft.
"The infringement in the present case is that Sinclair's opened up issues on the merits which will be the very questions to be determined by the trial judge. It seems to me that no party who has taken part in without prejudice discussions should be entitled to use them to his advantage on the merits of the case in one context, but then assert a right to prevent its opponent from doing so on the merits at the trial."
Practice note [McKenzie Friends: Civil and Family Courts] [2010] 1 WLR 1881
Decision
i) Mr Ravenscroft has asserted, and it has not been disputed, that he is nearly illiterate. He suffers from a marked degree of dyslexia and has difficulty in understanding substantial amounts of written material. He also says he is prone to inarticulacy due to his strongly held views about the subject matter of this claim.
ii) The legal aspects of this claim are highly technical and involve the construction of the expression main navigable channel as used in the British Waterways Act 1971. The scope of the written materials which Mr Ravenscroft will seek to deploy at the trial of this claim can be seen from the appendixes to the original version of the particulars of claim. Although not all of that material is relevant, I have no doubt that Mr Ravenscroft would have very real difficulty in presenting his case at the trial without some assistance.
iii) It is of some real significance that the CRT, which opposes Mr Ravenscroft's application, accepts the central point in his claim is one of real public importance and one which requires determination in the High Court. To my mind this adds considerable weight to Mr Ravenscroft's application on the basis that if he is not provided with any assistance, there will be an inequality of arms, particularly where he is facing the wealth of legal and advocacy experience possessed by Mr Stoner QC.