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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 >> CFC 26 Ltd v Brown Shipley & Co Ltd & Ors [2016] EWHC 3048 (Ch) (29 November 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/3048.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 3048 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings, Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CFC 26 LIMITED - and – |
Claimant |
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SHG-SH20 LIMITED - and – |
Proposed Claimant |
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BROWN SHIPLEY & CO LIMITED KBL EUROPEAN PRIVATE BANKERS LIMITED CONCORD W1 204 GPS LIMITED CONCORD 204 GPS LIMITED WESTMINSTER CITY COUNCIL |
Defendants |
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Mr Christopher Boardman (instructed by DWF LLP) for the First and Second Defendants
Mr Tony Beswetherick (instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) for the Third and Fourth Defendants
Mr Andrew Warnock QC (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the Fifth Defendant
Hearing dates: 13-14 October 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Newey :
Narrative
"It would appear that there are no current or imminent works on site which have the benefit of planning permission."
SHG does not appear to have exercised its right to appeal the notice.
"on 3rd June 2014 SHG submitted an application for a … CLEUD …, relying upon implementation of the 2006 planning permission. The CLEUD was eventually granted by the Council on 23rd January 2015 …."
"It cannot be right that the Receivers can sell the property without ensuring that full value is achieved from the 2006 Permission. To do so would be negligent and would cause huge losses to [SHG]. We have requested many times that the Receivers await the outcome of the [CLEUD] application but they have refused to do so. As guarantor to [SHG] I cannot stand back and allow a sale at an undervalue."
"[E]xtensive marketing efforts were made on behalf of the receivers to value and market the property. The receivers obtained, as I am satisfied, appropriate advice on the valuation of the property, both on the basis of an extant planning permission and on the basis of no planning permission but with hope value based upon the current policies of Westminster City Council in relation to conversion of offices to residential use. I am also satisfied, on the evidence, that the marketing of the property was at a price and on terms which the receivers were perfectly entitled to adopt in light of the advice that they had received and the situation which existed."
Having further noted that it was "clear on the authorities …, and on the evidence, that there was no duty upon the receivers to wait for clarification of the position in relation to the application for the certificate of existing use", Sales J arrived at these conclusions:
"21. Accordingly, I dismiss this application on the basis that, in my view, there is no serious issue to be tried that the receivers are acting in breach of duty in seeking to press on with their marketing campaign in respect of the property, which has now reached the stage of a contract race between two identified bidders.
22. Even if there were a serious issue to be tried for the purposes of the American Cyanamid test, I would refuse the present application on the balance of convenience.
23. If it transpired that the Claimant did have any valid claim against the receivers with respect to the marketing of the property, I consider that the value of that claim would be reasonably ascertainable in the usual way by reference to expert evidence of property values in the relevant area, and by reference to evidence of what has emerged from the marketing campaign which the receivers have in fact carried out."
"The first defendants [i.e. the Receivers] are not marketing the property properly whether as regards to its physical description or its existing or likely planning status and propose an imminent sale at a substantial undervalue to the substantial detriment of [SHG] and hence the guarantor. The second defendants [i.e. the Banks] are joined for the purpose of making any necessary representations in relation to injunctive relief as a result of the order of the Honourable Mr Justice Sales of 13 October 2014."
"The Third and Fourth Defendants [i.e. the Banks] procured and/or induced the First and Second Defendants [i.e. the Receivers] directly and/or indirectly and unjustifiably to breach their duties/equitable obligations to the Claimants [i.e. Mr Yeganeh and SHG]. The property was sold on 21 November 2014 at a significant undervalue."
The draft particulars of claim, which were evidently prepared by Ms Olivia Chaffin-Laird of counsel, alleged, among other things, that the Receivers, acting on the instructions of the Banks or with their approval, "specifically failed to exercise reasonable skill and care in the preparation of the marketing material which was inaccurate and misleading and/or in their marketing of the Property and/or further in securing the best price obtainable and/or such price that would be sufficient to discharge the sums due and sold the Property at an undervalue". In the next paragraphs, the draft particulars of claim alleged:
"67. At all material times [Brown Shipley] and/or KBL acted with the [Receivers] to conspire with, encourage and/or facilitate the transaction at an undervalue with the effect there was a shortfall in the security. For the avoidance of doubt it is averred [Brown Shipley] and/or KBL knowingly and/or intentionally procured and/or induced the [Receivers] to act in breach of their duties/equitable obligations to the Claimants ….
68. By procuring and/or inducing the [Receivers] to so act, interfering directly and/or indirectly and unjustifiably, [Brown Shipley] and/or KBL together with the [Receivers] interfered unlawfully in the sale of the Property."
"On 8 October 2014 I was informed by an employee of [Brown Shipley] that Concord … offered to purchase the Property for £15,000,000."
A further witness statement that Mr Yeganeh signed on 19 January 2015 included these remarks:
"On 8 October 2014 I was informed by Ravi Sidhoo @KBL & BSC that Concord … offered to purchase the Property for £15,000,000"
and
"The claim against the banks is for misrepresentation at the outset and subsequently improper behaviour with the effect receivers were appointed unnecessarily and inappropriately …. Further, the property was sold at an undervalue."
"Procedurally the position is really quite straightforward. No Particulars of Claim have been served in time and no application for an extension of time is before me. Turning to the merits, I will look at whether there is any good reason why Particulars of Claim were not served in good time …. No doubt it is complex but that alone cannot excuse the delays. The other aspect of the explanation for the delays relates to illness …. I am … not satisfied that whatever illness Mr Yeganeh has suffered … is sufficiently serious to justify the failure to serve the Particulars of Claim or the failure to apply now for leave to serve the Particulars of Claim out of time ….
… I will assume in Mr Yeganeh's favour that he has some arguable Claim or arguable Defence to the Counterclaim. Nevertheless, and regrettable though it is, it seems to me that there is no alternative that has any air of justice about it other than to give judgment in default on the counterclaim and to strike out these proceedings for failure to serve the Particulars of Claim."
"as against the 3rd and 4th Defendants [i.e. the Banks] and each of them (2) damages for interference with the 1st and 2nd Defendants [i.e. the Receivers] duties as Law of Property Act receivers; and as against the 1st, 2nd 3rd and 4th Defendants and each of them (3) damages for Conspiracy".
The particulars of claim, which were drafted by Mr Mark Watson-Gandy of counsel, alleged, among other things, as follows:
"67. The First and Second Defendants acted heedless of their duties as agent for and on behalf of SHG but instead acted on [Brown Shipley] and/or KBL's instructions and at their behest.
68. Further or alternatively, the First and Second Defendants, acting on the instructions of and/or with the approval of [Brown Shipley] and KBL, failed to exercise reasonable skill and care in the preparation of the marketing material which was inaccurate and misleading and/or in their marketing of the Property and/or further in securing the best price obtainable and/or such price that would be sufficient to discharge the sums due and sold the Property at an undervalue ….
69. Further or alternatively, between October 2014 and November 2014 the 1st and 2nd and 3rd and 4th Defendants and each of them wrongfully and with intent to injure SHG and / or cause loss to SHG conspired and combined together to injure SHG by unlawful means namely by depriving it of the benefit of its equity of redemption in the said Property by causing it to be sold at an undervalue to Concord in breach of the 1st and 2nd Defendant's duty to SHG ….
70. Further or alternatively, in or about October 2014 to November 2014 [Brown Shipley] and / or KBL, by their servants or agents wrongfully and without the consent of SHG (and acting for their own benefit and ends and without lawful justification) induced, procured or facilitated the 1st and 2nd Defendants to breach their equitable duty …, notwithstanding SHG's economic interest in the said Property selling for its true market value.
71. At all material times, [Brown Shipley] and / or KBL well knew of the 1st and 2nd Defendant's receivership and their equitable duties to SHG as receivers alternatively well knew of the 1st and 2nd Defendant's receivership and were recklessly indifferent to the 1st and 2nd Defendant's equitable duties to SHG …."
"29. As regards the merits, I am entirely satisfied that there is no real prospect of the court reaching a conclusion which is any more favourable to Mr Yeganeh than the conclusion reached by Birss J ….
31. I was taken to the evidence which amply justified Sales J's conclusion that there was no real prospect of challenging the sale for £15 million. I cannot imagine any judge reaching a different conclusion on this evidence ….
32. The matter does not end with the underlying merits (or lack of merits) of the substantive challenge to the Receivers' exercise of their power of sale. By the time the case came before Birss J, [SHG] was in serious breach of procedural orders and needed relief from sanction. Mr Watson-Gandy [i.e. counsel then appearing for Mr Yeganeh and SHG] placed reliance on the fact that the Mitchell test was in force at the time of Birss J's judgment and that this deprived Mr Yeganeh of the more liberal test enshrined in Denton. If the facts had been different, it might have been necessary for me to decide whether a change in the law justifies a re-hearing under rule 23.11. However I am entirely satisfied that the result would have been exactly the same if the court had applied Denton:
32.1 The failure to serve [particulars of claim] for nearly 3 months was serious and significant, given that the [defendants' solicitors] were chasing and had threatened applications to strike out, and that Mr Yeganeh gave repeated promises which were not fulfilled. The failure is even more serious when one considers the allegations of conspiracy.
32.2 As is clear from my recital of the facts, there was no good reason for the breach.
32.3 Mr Yeganeh's conduct was contrary to almost every aspect of the Overriding Objective. Further, Mr Dalton recognised the need for an application for relief from sanction but he failed to make any such application before Birss J.
33. I therefore dismiss this application. The proceedings remain struck out. If it had been necessary to do so, I would have acceded to the Defendants' application to strike out."
"Mr Boardman [who was then, as before me, appearing for the Banks] takes particular exception to paragraph 69 of the [particulars of claim], which alleges that the Receivers acted on the instructions of the Bank. No particulars have been given of this allegation, which is fundamental to [SHG's] claim that the Banks conspired with the Receivers. [SHG's] claim appears to suffer from many of the weaknesses to which I have referred in connection with Mr Yeganeh's personal claim, but there is no application before me to strike it out and accordingly I say nothing more about the merits of the claim, save that in the exercise of the court's discretion this is clearly an appropriate case for security for costs."
"I have set out above some of the internal inconsistencies in [Mr Yeganeh's] account and the assertions which are simply not credible. I am satisfied that I cannot accept anything that Mr Yeganeh says unless it is corroborated by independent evidence or is inherently probable."
"9. On a date or dates of which SHG is unable to give particulars save that it was between about July 2013 and September 2014, KBL and/or [Brown Shipley] entered into a corrupt agreement with Concord under which they would procure a sale of Sofia House to Concord at a price as low as possible consistent with recovery of their investment, in return for payment of a secret commission by Concord to KBL and/or [Brown Shipley] and/or individual members of staff at those banks.
10. Such agreement was in breach of the duties owed by KBL and [Brown Shipley] to SHG, including their duty to act in good faith towards SHG, to have regard to the interests of SHG and anyone else with an interest in the equity of redemption (including Mr Yeganeh) and to obtain the best price reasonably obtainable. Further or alternatively insofar as KBL and/or [Brown Shipley] involved itself in the arrangements for the sale of Sofia House, it came under a duty to exercise due care to SHG in respect of the timing and manner in which the sale is conducted and to act honestly fairly and professionally in relation to the sale ….
13. After this [i.e. the appointment of the Receivers] took place, Mr Yeganeh had a number of discussions with Mr Ravi Sidhoo, a member of staff at [Brown Shipley] and Head of the Bank's Global South Asian Business. Mr Sidhoo informed Mr Yeganeh that he believed there was collusion between individuals at [Brown Shipley] and Concord, that certain individuals at Brown Shipley stood to gain directly from a swift sale of Sofia House to Concord and that those individuals intended to ensure sale of the property to Concord quickly and at any price ….
17. The letter [imposing a deadline of potential purchasers] was written on the instructions of, or alternatively with the encouragement and/or agreement of, [Brown Shipley] and/or KBL pursuant to their corrupt agreement with Concord. The intention of [Brown Shipley] and/or KBL was that the short period allowed would make it impossible for any buyer other than Concord to carry out the necessary due diligence so as to be ready for exchange by the deadline. The letter was a further breach by KBL and/or [Brown Shipley] of their duty to SHG including their duty to SHG to act in good faith ….
20. On 21st October 2014 the Receivers exchanged contracts with Concord at a price of £15 million, the lowest of the 3 offers received by them. Such sale was a further breach by [Brown Shipley] and/or KBL of its aforesaid duties to SHG and Mr Yeganeh in that they acted in bad faith in pursuance of a corrupt agreement with Concord, paid no regard to the interests of SHG or Mr Yeganeh, did not care about the price realised provided that it covered their investment and failed to make any attempt to realise the best available price for the property inter alia by waiting a further two to four weeks for Longridge to be ready to exchange.
21. Further by entering into the said corrupt agreement Concord became liable to SHG and/or Mr Yeganeh for inducement of [Brown Shipley] and/or KBL to breach their aforesaid duties to Mr Yeganeh and SHG. Further or in the further alternative the said corrupt agreement and consequent sale at undervalue amounted to an unlawful conspiracy between [Brown Shipley] and/or KBL and Concord."
i) Mr Blackburne says in his witness statement that the "crux of the matter starts with an unfortunate error on the part of Westminster City Council planning department"; andii) Mr Rashid speaks in his statement of "negligence of Westminster council" and of the Banks having been "negligent".
"The best particulars of conversations between Mr Yeganeh and Mr Sidhoo that SHG is currently able to provide are as follows:
(1) By email dated 23rd December 2013 Mr Sidhoo informed Mr Yeganeh 'I am concerned with people in the Bank re Concord. There are direct contacts! Meet you tonight';
(2) Mr Yeganeh retains a transcript of a telephone conversation with Mr Sidhoo which took place on 25th October 2014. In that conversation Mr Yeganeh referred to collusion between 'Concord and this lot' (ie the bank) and Mr Sidhoo replied that he did not want to talk about that, and that 'We know what happened. You know what happened. I know what happened. So we know it. What's the point of discussing it again and again' Mr Yeganeh said 'I made you a promise I would not bring anything up. It's now a year. I want you to be out of the bank. … Mr Sidhoo said 'I didn't keep my mouth shut did I? I didn't keep my mouth shut. … If I had kept my mouth shut I wouldn't have been in any problems … I have said something: I have to stand by it. My decision to inform you… it was my personal decision'."
The Banks and Concord
i) The case against the Banks and Concord depends on the allegation (in paragraph 9 of the particulars of claim) that "KBL and/or [Brown Shipley] entered into a corrupt agreement with Concord under which they would procure a sale of Sofia House to Concord at a price as low as possible consistent with recovery of their investment, in return for payment of a secret commission by Concord to KBL and/or [Brown Shipley] and/or individual members of staff at those banks";ii) Since this amounts to an allegation of fraud, the particulars of claim should contain "full particulars" of the allegation and the facts on the basis of which any inference of fraud or dishonesty is alleged (see paragraph 10.1 of the Chancery Guide). As they stand, however, the particulars of claim provide very little detail. There is, for example, no account of which individuals are said to have spoken to whom or when, nor of who was to receive what as "secret commission". Paragraph 13 of the particulars of claim states that Mr Sidhoo informed Mr Yeganeh that he "believed there was collusion between individuals at [Brown Shipley] and Concord, that certain individuals at Brown Shipley stood to gain directly from a swift sale of Sofia House to Concord and that those individuals intended to ensure sale of the property to Concord quickly and at any price", but the particulars of claim do not say quite when Mr Yeganeh spoke to Mr Sidhoo or explain the basis of Mr Sidhoo's apparent belief;
iii) The draft amended particulars of claim are designed to improve the position. The new paragraph 13A would provide information about an email from Mr Sidhoo of 23 December 2013 and a telephone conversation on 25 October 2014. However, what is said in the paragraph, even assuming it to be accurate, does not seem to me to sustain the "corrupt agreement" allegation. The fact (if it be one) that there were "direct contacts" between the Banks and Concord in December 2013 does not appear to me to lend any significant support to SHG's case. At the time, Concord had claimed to forfeit the Underlease over which the Banks had security and had brought possession proceedings. In the circumstances, it would not be surprising if Concord and the Banks had, quite properly, been in contact about how matters could be resolved. As for the telephone conversation of 25 October 2014, it is Mr Yeganeh (and not Mr Sidhoo) who is said to have used the word "collusion" and it is not evident what even he meant by it. Further, the quotations suggest that Mr Yeganeh and Mr Sidhoo were referring to something that had happened a year earlier (i.e. about the time that Concord sought to forfeit and the Banks appointed the Receivers), whereas Sofia House was not placed on the market until June 2014. It is, in short, impossible to infer the "corrupt agreement" that SHG alleges from the new paragraph 13A;
iv) It is, moreover, implicit in the draft amended particulars of claim that SHG and Mr Yeganeh cannot supply any more compelling particulars. Paragraph 13A is stated to contain the "best particulars of conversations between Mr Yeganeh and Mr Sidhoo that SHG is currently able to provide";
v) Further, it is a striking fact that the witness statements of Mr Rashid, Mr Blackburne and Mr Anandan (in other words, those made available to the Banks and Concord in purported compliance with the unless order that Master Bowles had made) provide no evidence of the alleged "corrupt agreement". In fact, far from demonstrating fraud, Mr Rashid accuses the Banks of having been "negligent" (see paragraph 39(ii) above). The deficiencies in SHG's evidence are the more significant because more than seven months had passed since the proceedings had been issued, upwards of four months had elapsed since the Banks and Concord had served their applications and evidence and it was nearly two months since Deputy Master Lloyd had required SHG to file and serve any evidence in response by 12 September;
vi) Another (and important) point is that, supposing Mr Sidhoo were to have said or written anything lending any real support to the "corrupt agreement" allegation by October 2014 (as the particulars of claim suggest), Mr Yeganeh could have been expected to have relied on it when applying for injunctive relief (between 10 and 15 October) or, failing that, at least to have referred to it in the draft particulars of claim mentioned in paragraph 19 above and his witness statements of 4 December 2014 and 19 January 2015 (as to which, see paragraph 20 above) or to have caused SHG to do so in the particulars of claim served in the 2015 Claim. He did none of these things;
vii) The "corrupt agreement" alleged by SHG is not even consistent with the terms on which the Underlease was in fact sold to Concord. The agreement was supposedly to sell "at a price as low as possible consistent with recovery of [the Banks'] investment", but the Banks were in fact left out of pocket;
viii) For good measure, Mr Ritchie Irvine of DWF LLP, who represent the Banks, has explained in a witness statement that Mr Sidhoo has stated that what SHG alleges is "utter rubbish" and that individuals with the Banks have described it as totally untrue and Mr Nicholas Pike of Pinsent Masons LLP, who act for Concord, has confirmed that the alleged "corrupt agreement" has been denied by individuals at Concord.
The Council
"On 18th July 2013 the Council issued an Enforcement Notice for removal of hoardings outside Sofia House. The Notice stated that 'It would appear that there are no current or imminent works on site which have the benefit of planning permission'. Not only was the issue of the notice without reasonable and probable cause since there was in fact a valid planning permission, but it was also malicious. In relation to malice, the Claimant relies upon the fact that the Council was aware that the planning permission had been implemented and so was aware that there was no reasonable or probable cause for the Notice."
As for negligence and/or negligent misstatement, the particulars of claim say this (at paragraph 30):
"Further or alternatively there was sufficient proximity between the Council and SHG as holder of the benefit of the Council's 2006 planning permission to give rise to a duty of care in the Council. There is no legal or public policy reason why the Council should not be held liable for the consequences of negligently issuing the enforcement notice and thereafter until January 2015 refusing to acknowledge the validity of the 2006 planning permission. In the premises the Council is liable to SHG for negligence and/or negligent misstatement."
Negligence and negligent misstatement
"Against that background, and given the discretionary nature of the power conferred to grant or refuse planning permission under section 29 of the [Town and Country Planning Act 1971], it seems to us clear that the policy of the Act conferring that power is not such as to create a duty of care at common law which would make the public authority liable to pay compensation for foreseeable loss caused by the exercise or non-exercise of that power."
Potter LJ expressed agreement (at P503) with a passage in which Collins J (the first instance judge) had said:
"The local authority's duty under the Planning Acts is to control and regulate development in the interests of the inhabitants of the area. It is of course inevitable, particularly where there are major developments, that some people are going to be adversely affected …. There may be more noise as a result. There may be other adverse effects. There may even be nuisances created in some situations. Of course the local authority has to consider the effect on the environment and the adverse effect, if any upon neighbouring occupiers. Those are all proper planning considerations.
[However] … [i]t seems to me that it would be wholly detrimental to the proper process of considering planning applications if the local authority, in addition had to have regard to the private law interests of any persons who might be affected by the grant of permission, and to ask itself in each case whether it had properly had regard to the individual rights of those concerned. If it were potentially liable to actions in negligence in those circumstances, it seems to me that the carrying out of its important functions in the public interest would be likely to be adversely affected."
"Nor does it seem to us that the [claimants'] position can be improved by some alternative formulation of his cause of action on the basis of 'assumption of responsibility'. Where an allegation of 'assumption of responsibility' is made against a person or body carrying out a statutory function, there must be something more than the performance (negligent or otherwise) of the statutory function to establish such assumption of responsibility …. Nor do we consider that [counsel for the claimants'] fourth head has any substance. Even assuming that the actions of the [local authority] were so negligent and unreasonable as to amount to irrationality, that does not in itself suffice to create a private right of action in negligence, as opposed to founding the basis of some public law challenge to the exercise of the [local authority's] powers. The cause of action, if it exists, remains one for breach of duty in the tort of negligence."
"Thus, it seems to us that, despite the further arguments advanced in the appeal, its success remains dependent upon the [claimants] establishing the existence of a common law duty of care owed to them by the [local authority] not to cause them damage as a result of a negligent failure to exercise their discretionary powers, and/or to carry out their duties as to prevent the creation of a nuisance by an adjoining landowner which resulted in injury and damage to them. In our view, no such duty exists and Collins J. was correct in the decision to which he came."
"[T]he question for us … is whether an enforcing authority, in giving advice that leads to the issue of improvement or prohibition notices, owes a duty of care to the owner of the business enterprise in question. In my judgment, subject to one qualification not relevant to the present case, it does not. It is implicit in the [Health and Safety at Work etc. Act] 1974 that improvement notices and prohibition notices may cause economic loss or damage to the business enterprise in question. It would, in my view, be seriously detrimental to the proper discharge by enforcing authorities of their responsibilities in respect of public health and safety if they were to be exposed to potential liability in negligence at the suit of the owners of the businesses adversely affected by their decisions. The Act of 1974 itself provides remedies against errors or excesses on the part of inspectors and enforcing authorities. I would decline to add the possibility of an action in negligence to the statutory remedies."
"Where a statutory power is given to a local authority and damage is caused by what it does pursuant to that power, the ultimate question is whether the particular issue is justiciable or whether the court should accept that it has no role to play. The two tests (discretion and policy/operational) to which I have referred are guides in deciding that question. The greater the element of policy involved, the wider the area of discretion accorded, the more likely it is that the matter is not justiciable so that no action in negligence can be brought. It is true that Lord Reid and Lord Diplock in the Dorset Yacht case accepted that before a claim can be brought in negligence, the plaintiffs must show that the authority is behaving so unreasonably that it is not in truth exercising the real discretion given to it. But the passage I have cited was, as I read it, obiter, since Lord Reid made it clear that the case did not concern such a claim, but rather was a claim that Borstal officers had been negligent when they had disobeyed orders given to them. Moreover, I share Lord Browne-Wilkinson's reluctance to introduce the concepts of administrative law into the law of negligence, as Lord Diplock appears to have done."
"where action is taken by a state authority under statutory powers designed for the benefit or protection of a particular class of persons, a tortious duty of care will not be held to be owed by the state authority to others whose interests may be adversely affected by an exercise of the statutory power. The reason is that the imposition of such a duty would or might inhibit the exercise of the statutory powers and be potentially adverse to the interests of the class of persons the powers were designed to benefit or protect, thereby putting at risk the achievement of their statutory purpose."
"112 In some areas, such as health care and education, public authorities provide services which involve relationships with individual members of the public giving rise to a recognised duty of care no different from that which would be owed by any other entity providing the same service. A hospital and its medical staff owe the same duty to a patient whether they are operating within the National Health Service or the private sector: Roe v Minister of Health [1954] 2 QB 66. A school and its teaching staff owe the same duty to a pupil whether it is a state maintained school or a private school: Woodland v Swimming Teachers Association [2014] AC 537. Educational psychology is a professional service linked to education. An organisation which provides an educational psychology service, and its educational staff, owe the same duty to a pupil whether they are operating in the public or the private sector: X (Minors) v Bedfordshire County Council [1995] 2 AC 633.
113 Besides the provision of such services, which are not peculiarly governmental in their nature, it is a feature of our system of government that many areas of life are subject to forms of state controlled licensing, regulation, inspection, intervention and assistance aimed at protecting the general public from physical or economic harm caused by the activities of other members of society (or sometimes from natural disasters). Licensing of firearms, regulation of financial services, inspections of restaurants, factories and children's nurseries, and enforcement of building regulations are random examples. To compile a comprehensive list would be virtually impossible, because the systems designed to protect the public from harm of one kind or another are so extensive.
114 It does not follow from the setting up of a protective system from public resources that if it fails to achieve its purpose, through organisational defects or fault on the part of an individual, the public at large should bear the additional burden of compensating a victim for harm caused by the actions of a third party for whose behaviour the state is not responsible. To impose such a burden would be contrary to the ordinary principles of the common law."
Malicious prosecution: prosecution?
"In an action for malicious prosecution the claimant must show first that he was prosecuted by the defendant, that is to say, that the law was set in motion against him by the defendant on a criminal charge; secondly, that the prosecution was determined in his favour; thirdly, that it was without reasonable and probable cause; fourthly, that it was malicious. The onus of proving every one of these is on the claimant. Evidence of malice of whatever degree cannot be invoked to dispense with or diminish the need to establish separately each of the first three elements of the tort."
"To prosecute is to set the law in motion, and the law is only set in motion by an appeal to some person clothed with judicial authority in regard to the matter in question".
The service of an enforcement notice, Mr Warnock argued, involves no "appeal to some person clothed with judicial authority". An enforcement notice must identify the matters that appear to the local authority to constitute a breach of planning control and specify what the authority requires to be done, but it is not of itself a resort to a "person clothed with judicial authority" and it may never lead to a prosecution. In fact, Mr Warnock pointed out, section 172A of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 allows a local authority to give someone served with an enforcement notice a letter containing an assurance that he is not at risk of being prosecuted.
"To put in force the process of the law maliciously and without any reasonable or probable cause is wrongful …."
Malicious prosecution: malice?
"Prosecutors or employees of the Crown Prosecution Service are not immune from actions for malicious prosecution. Nevertheless it is essential that before such actions are … allowed to be pursued through the courts, anxious scrutiny should be made of them to ensure that the immunity against actions for negligence … is not circumvented by the pleading device of converting what is in reality no more than allegations of negligence into claims for malicious prosecution."
In an earlier case, Glinski v McIver [1962] AC 726, Lord Radcliffe said (at 755) in a passage quoted both in Thacker (by Chadwick LJ) and Carter:
"In my opinion, [the issue as to the defendant's belief or lack of it in the truth of the charge] does not arise unless there is some contested evidence bearing directly upon the defendant's belief at the relevant date, apart from anything that could merely be inferred as to his belief from the strength or weakness of the case before him."
"63.1 First, the fact that Notice was issued without reasonable and probable cause ….
63.2 Second, [the Council's] knowledge that, in fact, planning permission had been and/or was being implemented:
(a) It is common ground that a building control surveyor acting for [the Council], Mr Ryan Fitzgerald confirmed that, in his opinion, works had been commenced for the purposes of the Building Regulations 2005, following his inspection on 26 August 2009 …. That opinion was communicated to [the Council] in 2010 ….
(b) It is common ground that a solicitor employed by [the Council], a Ms Chohan, acknowledged that works which had the benefit of planning permission had commenced at the site within the statutory period ….
A further fact which supports the allegation of malice is [the Council's] decision to commence winding-up proceedings against [SHG] for non-payment of business rates where it knew that the Property should have been removed from the register because it was being redeveloped."
Other matters
Conclusion