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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 >> Baxendale-Walker v Irwin Mitchell LLP & Ors [2018] EWHC 3423 (Ch) (20 December 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/3423.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 3423 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (Ch D)
IN THE MATTER OF PAUL BAXENDALE WALKER (A BANKRUPT)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
7 The Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
PAUL BAXENDALE-WALKER | ||
(a Bankrupt) | Applicant | |
- and – | ||
IRWIN MITCHELL LLP | ||
JOHNSONS SOLICITORS LIMITED | ||
GRIFFIN LAW LIMITED | ||
MISHCON DE REYA LLP | ||
MICHAEL LEEDS AND KEVIN HELLARD | ||
( as Trustees in Bankruptcy of Paul Baxendale-Walker ) | ||
HAWK CONSULTANCY LLC | Respondents |
____________________
No appearance by the First, Second, Third, Fourth and Sixth Respondents
Donald Lilly (instructed by Norton Rose Fulbright) for the Fifth Respondents
Hearing date: 11 December 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
'4.1 A general civil restraint order may be made by-
(1) A judge of the Court of Appeal;
(2) A judge of the High Court; or
(3) A designated Civil Judge or their appointed deputy in the County Court where the party against whom the order is made persists in issuing claims or making applications which are totally without merit, in circumstances where an extended civil restraint order would not be sufficient or appropriate.'
"An extended civil restraint order may be made by –
(1) a judge of the Court of Appeal;
(2) a judge of the High Court; or
(3) a Designated Civil Judge or their appointed deputy in the County Court,
where a party has persistently issued claims or made applications which are totally without merit."
Such an order, which is wider than a limited order, restrains the party from issuing claims or making applications in either any court ( if the order is made by a Court of Appeal Judge ), in the High Court ( if the order is made by a High Court Judge ) or in a County Court ( if the order is made by a designated Civil Judge in the County Court ). The order restrains the party from issuing applications or claims in the relevant court or courts, 'concerning any matter involving or relating or touching upon or leading to the proceedings in which the order is made without first obtaining the permission of a judge identified in the order.'
'In my judgment, a court is entitled to have regard to all the claims or applications made which were totally without merit in deciding whether it has power to make an extended civil restraint order in accordance with paragraph 3.1 of PD3C. The court is not limited to consider solely the claims and applications made since the expiry of the latest extended civil restraint order. I reach that conclusion for the following reasons.
39 First, the language of paragraph 3.1 of PD 3C requires a court to consider whether a party 'has persistently issued claims or made applications which are totally without merit'. There is nothing in the language to indicate that a court is only entitled to look at claims issued or applications made within a particular time-frame, for example, in the period since the expiry of the latest extended civil restraint order. There is nothing in the language of paragraph 3.1 which indicates that a court must leave out of account claims or applications which were totally without merit and which led to the imposition of an earlier extended civil restraint order. There is nothing in the language to suggest that the making of an extended civil restraint order, in effect, draws a line drawn under conduct occurring prior to that date or that persistence is only to be assessed by reference to conduct occurring after the expiry of the order. Rather, paragraph 3.1 is describing a state of affairs, namely that a party has persistently issued claims or made applications which are totally without merit. It is not prescribing or requiring that only applications made within a particular time scale, or after a particular date, can be considered in assessing persistence.'
... it is only apt to prohibit the issue of further applications within a single set of proceedings without the permission of a judge. … Normally we would not expect a civil restraint order [of the "limited" kind] to be made until after the litigant has made a number of applications in a single set of proceedings all of which have been dismissed because they were totally devoid of merit. …
(Emphasis added; other emphasis omitted.)
[88] … A point arose in this case whether the requirement for two applications which are totally without merit can only be satisfied by two applications made in the same proceedings in which the limited civil restraint order is to be made. Counsel were not aware of a decision on the point.
[89] The way the sub-paragraph in the Practice Direction is expressed is at least capable of being read as not being limited to such a situation and as including a case in which one or both applications which are totally without merit were made in other proceedings. However Mr Hughes pointed out that Court Form N19 (Limited Civil Restraint Order) is clearly written on the basis that the totally without merit applications are in the same proceedings as the one in which Limited CRO is to be made. Mr Hughes also reminded me that in Bhamjee v Forsdick [2004] 1 WLR 88, which was the judgment which led to the Practice Direction being drawn up, the Court of Appeal's judgment (paragraph 39) clearly contemplated that what are now called Limited CROs would be made only when the applications made in the same proceedings had been found to be totally without merit.
[90] … it seems to me that since the paragraph appears in a context of a set of sub-paragraphs concerned with whether to make a Limited CRO, read in that context and bearing in mind the Practice Direction was produced following Bhamjee, there is a strong case that the sub-paragraph requires two applications in the same proceedings, i.e. the proceedings in which the Limited CRO is sought.
Dated