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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 >> Edwardian Group Ltd & Anor v Singh & Ors [2017] EWHC 2805 (Ch) (10 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/2805.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2805 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF EDWARDIAN GROUP LIMITED ESTERA TRUST (JERSEY) LIMITED HERINDER SINGH |
Petitioners |
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- and - |
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JASMINDER SINGH VERITE TRUST COMPANY LIMITED JEMMA TRUST COMPANY LIMITED EDWARDIAN GROUP LIMITED JASMINDER SINGH AND HERINDER SINGH (as trustees of the English Trusts) |
Respondents |
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Daniel Lightman QC (instructed by Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe (UK) LLP) for the First Respondent
Sam O'Leary (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) for the Second and Third Respondents
Hearing dates: 26 and 27 October 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MORGAN:
Part I: Introduction
"From 2009 to December 2014 when he was introduced to the current funders, Herinder (initially) and subsequently the Petitioners together, in each case through their solicitors, actively but unsuccessfully sought funding to commence the litigation."
"Redacted parts of documents listed in the List of Documents at Schedule 1 which refer to, reproduce, summarise, embody or otherwise reveal directly or indirectly the nature, content of effect of privileged communications."
I understand that the quoted words apply to the redacted parts of the Litigation Funding Documents.
Part II: The Litigation Funding Documents
(1) the process of seeking funding was affected by the legal advice on the merits of the case, legal advice on the funding process and without prejudice matters; he says that he cannot refer to these matters and he does not waive privilege;(2) the process was entrusted to legal advisers because they had experience of litigation funding and ATE insurance and at least one broker was used;
(3) the process was extremely difficult and time consuming;
(4) he says that it would be apparent from the documents disclosed that the process involved repeated attempts and a large number of different providers;
(5) the disclosed documents show that the Petitioners were "actively and persistently seeking funding";
(6) he refers to the overall chronology but he would not recite the contents of the documents;
(7) he then refers to a number of features of the search for funding;
(8) he repeatedly refers to matters being clear from the disclosed documents;
(9) an example of references to the contents of documents is in paragraph 98(d); whilst I cannot definitively say what the position is, I speculated in the course of argument that paragraph 98(d) refers to matters of alleged fact which could not be verified from the disclosed documents by reason of the redactions which have been made; it was not submitted that this speculation was wrong.
(1) back and forth parts of correspondence with funders or brokers;(2) discussions between the Petitioners/their solicitors and funders relating to the terms of the funding, the reasons for those terms and the acceptance or rejection of those terms;
(3) references to the Petitioners' legal advice as to the merits and/or strategy.
Mr Willis says that there are no redactions in relation to category 1. He accepts that redactions in relation to category 3 are prima facie justified and states that the First Respondent is not currently seeking disclosure in relation to the redactions in this category, although he reserves his position in that respect. As to category 2, he says that he understands that the redactions have been made on the basis that the legal advice given to the Petitioners can be "inferred". He seems to accept that a document from which the contents of legal advice can be inferred can be the subject of a claim to privilege. He then makes a detailed submission as to why the contents of the legal advice could not be inferred in this way in this case. He also distinguishes between a communication which reveals the content of legal advice and one which simply leads to speculation as to what that advice might be.
"The documents which have been withheld or redacted are privileged, in that they tend to reveal the advice which the Petitioners have received in relation to the merits of the case, in relation to strategy and tactics, and in relation to the funding itself. Furthermore, these are matters where the Court can properly, in the exercise of its discretion, refuse disclosure in any event (regardless of whether they are relevant to an issue in the case)."
(1) some litigation funding documents have been "withheld" and others have been disclosed in a redacted form;(2) the Petitioners claim to be entitled to withhold or redact documents on the grounds of privilege;
(3) the claim to privilege is based on the assertion that the documents withheld or the parts redacted would "tend to reveal the advice which the Petitioners have received";
(4) in the alternative (presumably) to their claim to privilege, the Petitioners assert that the court has a discretion to refuse to order disclosure (and presumably inspection) of the documents which had been withheld or of the redacted parts.
(1) the redactions were made to maintain privilege and at the same time to remove sensitive information;(2) all substantive terms as to funding which were being negotiated were redacted; this was to avoid what was described as "cherry picking";
(3) duplicative material was redacted;
(4) not all copies of draft documents, but usually only the last drafts of the documents, were disclosed;
(5) Mr Mervis explains the approach adopted as to which documents allowed the drawing of inferences as to legal advice; he then discusses in detail the terms as to funding which might allow such inferences to be drawn; he refers in particular to terms as to:
a) settlement;b) valuation;c) term and amount of funding;d) definitions of success and provisions as to termination;e) funder's return;f) amount and protection of security;g) certain representations and warranties;h) certain conditions precedent and document requests.
(1) the amount of a success fee or premium being charged to reflect the contracting party's assessment of the merits of the case;(2) any circumstances in which the solicitor or the funder could terminate the funding arrangement; and
(3) any terms by which the solicitors or the funder would require to be consulted on whether offers should be accepted.
This proposal was confined to documents relating to current funding and did not apply to documents in the period before 2014 when the Petitioners were introduced to their current funders.
"17. Save as mentioned below, none of the authorities to which I was referred deal with the case of a document which, rather than stating the substance of advice, is a document from which it is said the advice can be inferred. Two considerations lead me to the view that, unless perhaps the inference is obvious and inevitable in which case the document is in substance a statement of the advice or communication, privilege does not attach to such documents. First, it is the communication between the client and lawyer which is privileged either in its original form or in a summarised or paraphrased form. A document which does not contain the communication in any form contains nothing to which privilege attaches. [Counsel's] submission that a document from which the substance of the communication may be inferred "evidences" the privileged communication treats "evidences" as carrying its fact-finding meaning of "providing an evidential basis". I do not think that this is the sense in which the word is used in Three Rivers DC v Bank of England (No. 5) and other authorities. It is used, I believe, in the narrower sense, consistent with The Good Luck and other cases, of reproducing, summarising or paraphrasing the communication.
18. The second consideration is that inference is usually a matter of subjective judgment. Save in very clear cases, views may differ as to whether the inference can be made. A claim to privilege should not, in my judgment, depend on a subjective assessment of this sort. It would, as Sir Sydney Kentridge QC appearing for the Law Society in Three Rivers DC v Bank of England (No.6) submitted in relation to the issue on that appeal, introduce "an unwelcome element of subjective uncertainty": [2005] AC 610 at 630. There are in any case many documents which are clearly not privileged but from which the substance of legal advice may be inferred. A common example is a minute of a board meeting recording the directors' decision on a particular matter.
19. There is a reference to a claim for privilege based on inference in a short passage in the judgment of Finn J in the Federal Court of Australia in Pratt Holdings Pty Ltd v Commissioners of Taxation (2004) 207 ALR quoted in part in Thanki: The Law of Privilege at para 2.57:
"[20] The second principle which is more directly tied to the protection of communications is that the privilege extends to any document prepared by a lawyer or client from which there might be inferred the nature of the advice sought or given. Examples include communications between the various legal advisers of the client, draft pleadings, draft correspondence with the client or the other party, and bills of costs: Propend Finance, at CLR 569; ALR 597–8."
I do not consider that this provides a basis generally for a claim for privilege in any document from which legal advice may be inferred. Its restricted application is apparent from the examples given."
"The ratio of the decision is, I think, that where the selection of documents which a solicitor has copied or assembled betrays the trend of the advice which he is giving the client the documents are privileged. [Counsel] for the plaintiff put this forward as an exception to what he claimed was the general rule, that non-privileged documents do not acquire privilege simply by being copied. If the ratio I have given is correct, the authority is consistent with the fundamental principle underlying the privilege."
"If and insofar as the disclosure of the funding agreements would or might give the other side an indication of the advice which was being sought or the advice which was being given, it would be covered by legal advice privilege."
"86. It is possible to distill the following propositions from the authorities on challenges to claims to privilege:
(1) The burden of proof is on the party claiming privilege to establish it … . A claim for privilege is an unusual claim in the sense that the party claiming privilege and that party's legal advisers are, subject to the power of the court to inspect the documents, the judges in their or their own client's cause. Because of this, the court must be particularly careful to consider how the claim for privilege is made out and affidavits should be as specific as possible without making disclosure of the very matters that the claim for privilege is designed to protect … .
(2) An assertion of privilege and a statement of the purpose of the communication over which privilege is claimed in an affidavit are not determinative and are evidence of a fact which may require to be independently proved … .
(3) It is, however, difficult to go behind an affidavit of documents at an interlocutory stage of proceedings. The affidavit is conclusive unless it is reasonably certain from:
(a) the statements of the party making it that he has erroneously represented or has misconceived the character of the documents in respect of which privilege is claimed … .
(b) the evidence of the person who or entity which directed the creation of the communications or documents over which privilege is claimed that the affidavit is incorrect … .
(c) the other evidence before the court that the affidavit is incorrect or incomplete on the material points … .
(4) Where the court is not satisfied on the basis of the affidavit and the other evidence before it that the right to withhold inspection is established, there are four options open to it:
(a) It may conclude that the evidence does not establish a legal right to withhold inspection and order inspection … .
(b) It may order a further affidavit to deal with matters which the earlier affidavit does not cover or on which it is unsatisfactory … .
(c) It may inspect the documents: see CPR 31.19(6) … . Inspection should be a solution of last resort, in part because of the danger of looking at documents out of context at the interlocutory stage. It should not be undertaken unless there is credible evidence that those claiming privilege have either misunderstood their duty, or are not to be trusted with the decision making, or there is no reasonably practical alternative.
(d) At an interlocutory stage a court may, in certain circumstances, order cross-examination of a person who has sworn an affidavit, for example, an affidavit sworn as a result of the order of the court that a defendant to a freezing injunction should disclose his assets … . However, the weight of authority is that cross-examination may not be ordered in the case of an affidavit of documents … . In cases where the issue is whether the documents exist … the existence of the documents is likely to be an issue at the trial and there is a particular risk of a court at an interlocutory stage impinging on that issue."
(1) that was not the application that was before me;(2) if there were to be an application for specific disclosure, there would need to be a consideration of the relevance of the documents relating to current funding, given that the pleaded issue as to funding concerns delay prior to the time when the Petitioners were introduced to the current funders;
(3) if it is suggested that the First Respondent should be allowed to see the terms of the current funding to enable him to argue that, in the light of the terms which the Petitioners ultimately accepted, they acted unreasonably in not accepting earlier terms which were on offer, it is not clear to me that, with the redactions which have been made to the documents already disclosed and with similar redactions made to the current funding documents (if they were to be disclosed) that a point of that kind could be effectively explored at the trial;
(4) I am not persuaded, certainly on the material prepared for the inspection application, that the identity of the current funder will be material to the issues to be considered at the trial;
(5) I am cautious about ordering the disclosure of the identity of the current funder without being satisfied that its identity will be relevant to an issue at the trial;
(6) I doubt if the judge who conducts the Pre-Trial Review in this case will be in a better position than I am now in and I consider that if the First Respondent wishes to obtain an order that the Petitioners disclose the identity of the current funder, he makes that application to the trial judge at the trial.
Part III: The Magwells Documents
(1) the receivers of Magwells are asserting a lien over the relevant documents in relation to allegedly unpaid fees in the sum of £1.3 million;(2) the Petitioners assert that Magwells do not have the benefit of a lien and, further, that the sum of £1.3 million is excessive; Mr Mervis gives more detail in relation to both of these points;
(3) the communications with the receivers for Magwells have included both open and without prejudice correspondence but agreement on the release of the documents has not been reached;
(4) Mr Mervis is not in a position to fully describe the communications he has had with the solicitors for the receivers as those communications contain privileged references to the way in which Magwells conducted the case on behalf of the Petitioners and because some of Magwells' fees may be sought from some of the Respondents in these proceedings;
(5) the Petitioners have proposed that the Respondents should apply under CPR 31.17 for an order that Magwells disclose the documents to them;
(6) it is accepted that the Magwells Documents could include relevant documents but the number of such documents that have not already been disclosed by one or other party to the Petition is likely to be very small; Mr Mervis described his reasons for this conclusion over many pages of his witness statement;
(7) it is suggested that the application for disclosure of the Magwells documents is made for an ulterior motive connected with Jasminder's position in relation to the litigation brought against him by his father (who is now deceased and whose estate is insolvent);
(8) it would not be proportionate for the Petitioners to bring proceedings against the receivers of Magwells in an attempt to force production of the relevant documents;
(9) it would not be reasonable to require the Petitioner to pay £1.3 million or any similar sum to the receivers of Magwells to obtain production of the relevant documents;
(10) the Petitioners cannot be sure of reaching an agreement with the receivers of Magwells for the release of the documents and the First Respondent's application for disclosure and his solicitor's direct approach to the receivers has improved the negotiating position of the receivers.