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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> The Chartered Institute of Arbitrators v B & Ors [2019] EWHC 460 (Comm) (07 March 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2019/460.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 460 (Comm), [2019] WLR(D) 146, [2020] Bus LR 285 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE CHARTERED INSTITUTE OF ARBITRATORS |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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B C D |
Respondents |
____________________
Ms K Gough (instructed by Browne Jacobson LLP) for Respondent B
Hearing dates: 18 February 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Moulder :
Background
i) that he failed to disclose interests likely to affect his independence or impartiality; reliance is placed on the transcript of the hearing on 17 April 2015.
ii) that he wrongfully signed and submitted the acceptance of nomination form.
iii) that he failed to make disclosure on the acceptance of nomination form of any involvement with either party to the dispute; reliance is placed on the transcript of the hearing of 17 April 2015.
iv) that he called a meeting which was carried on inappropriately and of his own motion; reliance is placed on the transcript of the hearing.
v) that he questioned counsel during the hearing on 17 April 2015 in an aggressive and/or a hostile manner; reliance is placed on the transcript of the hearing.
vi) to the extent that any of the disciplinary charges referred to above are found proven, it is alleged that B is guilty of misconduct having acted in a manner which is injurious to the good name of the Institute and acted in a manner which fell below the standards expected of a competent practitioner in the field of private dispute resolution.
Applications
i) an order under CPR5.4 C(2) to obtain copies of the following documents from the court records in the proceedings in the Section 24 Application:
a) statements of case;
b) witness statements, including exhibits;
c) written submissions and skeleton arguments (together the "Documents");
ii) alternatively, an order that C supply the Documents to the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators.
i) the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators and B are entitled in the context of the disciplinary proceedings to refer to and/or rely on:
a) the Documents and
b) the circumstances of B's nomination and appointment as arbitrator in matters concerning D;
ii) use of such documents is in the public interest.
The First Application
Relevant Law
(1) The general rule is that a person who is not a party to proceedings may obtain from the court records a copy of –
(a) a statement of case, but not any documents filed with or attached to the statement of case, or intended by the party whose statement it is to be served with it;
(b) a judgment or order given or made in public (whether made at a hearing or without a hearing), subject to paragraph (1B).
…
(2) A non-party may, if the court gives permission, obtain from the records of the court a copy of any other document filed by a party, or communication between the court and a party or another person.
(3) A non-party may obtain a copy of a statement of case or judgment or order under paragraph (1) only if –
…
(d) judgment has been entered in the claim.
(1) A person wishing to obtain a copy of a document under rule 5.4B or rule 5.4C must pay any prescribed fee and –
(a) if the court's permission is required, file an application notice in accordance with Part 23; or
(b) ...
(2) An application for an order under rule 5.4C(4) or for permission to obtain a copy of a document under rule 5.4B or rule 5.4C (except an application for permission under rule 5.4C(6)) may be made without notice, but the court may direct notice to be given to any person who would be affected by its decision.
"[36.] The critical issue in relation to the court's jurisdiction under CPR 5.4C(2) is the meaning of the "records of the court".
…
[40.] … The "records of the court" are essentially documents kept by the court office as a record of the proceedings, many of which will be of a formal nature. The principal documents which are likely to fall within that description are those set out in paragraph 4.2A of CPR 5APD.4, together with "communication between the court and a party or another person", as CPR 5.4C(2) makes clear. In some cases there will documents held by the court office additional to those listed in paragraph 4.2A of CPR 5APD.4, but they will only be "records of the court" if they are of an analogous nature.
41. This will include a list of documents, but not the disclosed documents themselves. It may include witness statements and exhibits filed in relation to an application notice or Part 8 proceedings (see CPR 8.5), but not usually witness statements or expert reports exchanged by the parties in relation to a trial. Such statements and reports are not generally required to be filed with the court and they will typically be provided to the court only as part of the trial bundles.
(1) The claimant must file any written evidence on which he intends to rely when he files his claim form.
(2) The claimant's evidence must be served on the defendant with the claim form.
(3) A defendant who wishes to rely on written evidence must file it when he files his acknowledgment of service.
(4) If he does so, he must also, at the same time, serve a copy of his evidence on the other parties.
(5) The claimant may, within 14 days of service of the defendant's evidence on him, file further written evidence in reply.
(6) If he does so, he must also, within the same time limit, serve a copy of his evidence on the other parties.
(7) …
"107. I accept that developments since GIO mean that the court should now be regarded as having inherent jurisdiction to allow non-parties access to documents read or treated as read in open court, but it is important that that category of documents is clearly defined and that it does not go too far and put non-parties in a markedly better position than they would have been when trials were conducted orally. "
108. Based on current civil court practices, I would accordingly confine the jurisdiction to documents which are read out in open court; documents which the judge is invited to read in open court; documents which the judge is specifically invited to read outside court, and documents which it is clear or stated that the judge has read. These are all documents which are likely to have been read out in open court had the trial been conducted orally."
i) witness statements of Mr Thwaites of Stephenson Harwood and of B.
ii) April 2015 transcript of the hearing
iii) RICS form dated 21 January 2010
iv) Correspondence relating to the appointment of B and the ruling of 30 April 2015 (items 15 – 32 and 34 of the Annex to the applicant's skeleton argument).
"The GIO case is therefore authority that the court has an inherent jurisdiction to allow non-parties to obtain copies of skeleton arguments/written submissions used in lieu of oral submissions. The reason for this is that open justice requires that the public have the same opportunity to understand the issues in a case as they would have had if the openings had been given orally."
"(1) …
(2) There is inherent jurisdiction to allow non-parties inspection of:
(i) Witness statements of witnesses, including experts, whose evidence stands as evidence in chief and which would have been available for inspection during the course of the trial under CPR 32.13 .
(ii) Documents in relation to which confidentiality has been lost under CPR 31.22 and which are read out in open court; which the judge is invited to read in open court; which the judge is specifically invited to read outside court, or which it is clear or stated that the judge has read.
(iii) Skeleton arguments/written submissions or similar advocate's documents read by the court provided that there is an effective public hearing in which the documents are deployed.
"(iv) Any specific document or documents which it is necessary for a non-party to inspect in order to meet the principle of open justice. " [emphasis added]
"61. ... GIO involved an application by a non-party, FAI, for disclosure of various classes of documents… On appeal the application was narrowed so as to seek copies of documents referred to in witness statements and of opening skeleton arguments and any documents referred to therein. FAI wanted access to these documents to assist it in assessing what defences and/or claims against third parties it might have in a closely related action in which the same brokers and sub-brokers were involved in placing certain reinsurance.
62. The procedural background to the application was that before the trial started there had been a settlement between the plaintiff reinsurers and the defendant reassured and there had also been a settlement between the assured and the third party brokers. That left for trial claims over by the head brokers against two third party sub-brokers. After short oral openings, counsel for the head brokers and sub-brokers respectively placed before the judge lengthy written openings and invited him to read them following which they would deal with any queries and the trial could proceed. The trial was then adjourned for five days to give the judge reading time. In the course of this period the claimant head brokers settled with one of three sub-brokers, leaving in issue its claim against the other two sub-brokers. These latter did not appear and accordingly, when the trial resumed, the judge went on to prepare and two days later to deliver judgment on that claim. In the meantime FAI had made its disclosure application.
63. …
64. The court then considered FAI's application for copies of the written openings, skeleton arguments and the documents referred to therein. This application was advanced on the basis of the inherent jurisdiction of the court and in reliance on the principle of open justice.
…
68. The court accordingly rejected the application for copies of the documents. It, however, granted the application for the skeleton arguments/written submissions, explaining as follows at p995-7:
"the arguments for such an exercise in respect of the written submissions of counsel, or of skeleton arguments which are used as a substitute for oral submissions, seem to me to be a good deal stronger. [counsel for the respondent] for G.M.R. has emphasised the primary but limited purpose of the "public justice" rule, namely to submit the judges to the discipline of public scrutiny. As he neatly put it, it is designed to give the public the opportunity to "judge the judges" and not to judge the case, in the sense of enabling the public to engage in the same exercise of understanding and decision as the judge. That of course is true. However, the confidence of the public in the integrity of the judicial process as well as its ability to judge the performance of judges generally must depend on having an opportunity to understand the issues in individual cases of difficulty. As Lord Scarman observed in Home Office v. Harman [1983] 1 A.C. 280 , 316:
"When public policy in the administration of justice is considered, public knowledge of the evidence and arguments of the parties is certainly as important as expedition: and, if the price of expedition is to be the silent reading by the judge before or at trial of relevant documents, it is arguable that expedition will not always be consistent with justice being seen to be done."
This is particularly so in a case of great complication where careful preliminary exposition is necessary to enable even the judge to understand the case. Until recently at least, the opportunity for public understanding has been afforded by a trial process which has assumed, and made provision for, an opening speech by counsel. Further, the introduction in the Commercial Court, followed by general encouragement, of the practice of requiring skeleton arguments to be submitted to the court prior to trial was, as the name implies, aimed at apprising the court of the bones or outline of the parties' submissions in relation to the issues, rather than operating as a substitute for those submissions…. If, as in the instant case, an opening speech is dispensed with in favour of a written opening (or a skeleton argument treated as such) which is not read out, or even summarised, in open court before the calling of the evidence, it seems to me impossible to avoid the conclusion that an important part of the judicial process, namely the instruction of the judge in the issues of the case, has in fact taken place in the privacy of his room and not in open court. In such a case, I have no doubt that, on application from a member of the press or public in the course of the trial, it is within the inherent jurisdiction of the court to require that there be made available to such applicant a copy of the written opening or skeleton argument submitted to the judge.
...
In my view, the appropriate judicial approach to an application of this kind in a complicated case is to regard any member of the public who for legitimate reasons applies for a copy of counsel's written opening or skeleton argument, when it has been accepted by the judge in lieu of an oral opening, as prima facie entitled to it." [emphasis added]
Exercise of discretion
"127. As to the principles to be applied when the court is considering whether and how to exercise its discretion to grant permission for copies to be obtained by a non-party of the records of the court under 5.4C(2) the court has to balance the non-party's reasons for seeking copies of the documents against the party to the proceedings' private interest in preserving their confidentiality. Relevant factors are likely to include:
(1) The extent to which the open justice principle is engaged;
(2) Whether the documents are sought in the interests of open justice;
(3) Whether there is a legitimate interest in seeking copies of the documents and, if so, whether that is a public or private interest.
(4) The reasons for seeking to preserve confidentiality.
(5) The harm, if any, which may be caused by access to the documents to the legitimate interests of other parties.
128. I would endorse the general approach adopted in Dian and Pfizer Health that the court is likely to lean in favour of granting permission under 5.4C(2) where the principle of open justice is engaged and the applicant has a legitimate interest in inspecting the identified documents or class of documents. Conversely, where the open justice principle is not engaged, the court is unlikely to grant permission unless there are strong grounds for thinking that it is necessary in the interests of justice to do so.
129. In relation to the court's inherent jurisdiction the factors relevant to the exercise of discretion are likely to be such as those set out in paragraph 127 above. In the light of the guidance provided in GIO, Barings and Lilly Icos, and the importance of the principle of open justice, the court is likely to lean in favour of granting access to documents falling within the categories set out in paragraph 112(2) above where the applicant has a legitimate interest in inspecting the identified documents or class of documents."
"[124] …In relation to trials I accept that there has to be an effective hearing for the principle to be engaged. Once there is a hearing, however, the right of scrutiny arises, the principle of open justice is engaged and it will continue to be so up and until any settlement or judgment. The same will apply to the hearing of interlocutory applications.
…
[126] The principle of open justice is accordingly engaged as soon as there is an effective hearing. It may be more fully engaged if the hearing proceeds to a judgment, but it is still engaged. The only circumstance in which a judicial decision is likely to be necessary to engage the principle is where the application is determined on the papers and so there is no hearing, as was the case with one of the applications in Dian."
"[15] There can be no doubt that arbitration proceedings and materials produced in the course of them are treated as confidential to the parties and the arbitrator subject to certain exceptions. The result of the most recent Court of Appeal authority, Ali Shipping Corporation v. Shipyard Trogir [1999] 1 WLR 316, is that the exceptions to the general rule of arbitral confidentiality include disclosure by leave or order of the court which may be given when and to the extent that it is reasonably necessary to protect or establish the legal rights of a party to the arbitration by a third party or otherwise in the interests of justice. There appears to be no authority for the proposition that a third party can outside the ambit of disclosure by a party to an arbitration obtain an order from the court for access to materials in an arbitration to which he is not a party so that he can deploy them as evidence in other proceedings in which he is a party. [emphasis added]
[16] The character of confidentiality relating to arbitration proceedings is reflected in CPR 62.4.5.1 set out in paragraph 12 above. Because the intervention of the court in relation to arbitration is a judicial facility ancillary to the arbitral process, the criteria by reference to which the court should exercise its discretion with regard to the granting of such permission must clearly give substantial and normally overriding weight to the principles upon which the courts preserve the confidentiality of that process. In particular, a stranger to the arbitration proceedings should not in general be given access to claim forms unless he brings himself within an exception to the protection of confidentiality exemplified in Ali Shipping Corporation v. Shipyard Trogir, supra." [Emphasis added]
"38. The range of arbitration claims within the definition in CPR 62.10 is very wide. Adapting words of the President, there "cannot properly be a blanket protection of non-publication in all cases" which fall initially to be heard in private under CPR 62.10. It may be possible to some extent to group cases arising out of the same type of circumstances. I find it difficult, as at present advised, to see why a judgment determining that there was no valid or applicable arbitration agreement or (probably) that arbitrators issued an award without jurisdiction, or dismissing an application for a stay of current proceedings in favour of arbitration should be private. There are arbitrations about factual circumstances and issues which appear unlikely to involve any significant confidential information at all. The main motive to arbitrate may be different considerations, such as the expertise or informality of the arbitrators—many shipping and commodity arbitrations must fall into this category. In arbitration claims relating to such arbitrations, the starting point may easily give way to a public hearing. In every case, while it will be appropriate to start the hearing in private as contemplated by CPR 62.10, the Court should be ready to hear representations from one or other party that the hearing should be continued in public, and should anyway if appropriate raise this possibility with the parties, as Lord Woolf stressed in ex parte Kaim Todner [1999] QB 966"
"That case was concerned with the publication of judgments in respect of applications for ancillary relief. The judgment does, however, recognise that the confidentiality of the arbitral process should in general be protected unless in the public interest it is appropriate that a judgment should be published. However, it is definitely not authority for the proposition that arbitration claims except those covered by CPR 62.10(3)(a) should be heard in public unless the court otherwise orders."
Conclusion on the First Application
"It is important that the courts do not allow vague principles of open justice to cause them to pay mere lip service to the confidentiality of arbitration proceedings, while permitting inroads into that regime, unless it is really necessary to give access in the interests of justice."
i) Stephenson Harwood on behalf of C have consented to The Chartered Institute of Arbitrators and B being able to refer to and rely upon the witness statements in the Section 24 Application;
ii) although D has not consented, any harm to D would appear to be minimal as to the extent that they relate to confidential matters in the underlying arbitration, the disciplinary tribunal can maintain confidentiality of the details by sitting (at least in part and to the extent necessary) in private.
iii) B has raised no objection to the access to his own statement other than on the basis of general obligation of confidentiality in arbitration proceedings.
The Second Application -Declarations
Relevant law-jurisdiction
"[118] The court's present jurisdiction to grant a declaration is derived from statute, originally the Court of Chancery Act 1850, then section 50 of the Chancery Procedure Act 1852. The present statutory foundation is section 19 of the Supreme Court Act 1981, and also CPR Pt 40.20. It is well – established that a claimant does not need to have a subsisting cause of action against a defendant before the court will grant a claimant a declaration: see Guaranty Trust Co of New York v Hannay.
[119] The grant of a declaration is discretionary. The law has developed since the statement of principle by Lord Diplock in the leading case of Gouriet v Union of Post Office Workers… There is no doubt that the circumstances in which the court will be prepared to grant declaratory relief are now considerably wider than they were thought to be after Gouriet's case and the Meadows case...
[120] For the purposes of the present case, I think that the principles in the cases can be summarised as follows: (1) the power of the court to grant declaratory relief is discretionary. (2) There must, in general, be a real and present dispute between the parties before the court as to the existence or extent of a legal right between them. However, the claimant does not need to have a present cause of action against the defendant. (3) Each party must, in general, be affected by the court's determination of the issues concerning the legal right in question. (4) The fact that the claimant is not a party to the relevant contract in respect of which a declaration is sought is not fatal to an application for a declaration, provided that it is directly affected by the issue. (5) The court will be prepared to give declaratory relief in respect of a "friendly action" or where there is an "academic question" if all parties so wish, even on "private law" issues. This may particularly be so if it is a "test case", or it may affect a significant number of other cases, and it is in the public interest to decide the issue concerned. (6) However, the court must be satisfied that all sides of the argument will be fully and properly put. It must therefore ensure that all those affected are either before it or will have their arguments put before the court. (7) In all cases, assuming that the other tests are satisfied, the court must ask: is this the most effective way of resolving the issues raised. In answering that question it must consider the other options of resolving this issue."
"Where there has been an error of procedure such as a failure to comply with a rule or practice direction–
(a) the error does not invalidate any step taken in the proceedings unless the court so orders; and
(b) the court may make an order to remedy the error."
"These cases establish that the court's approach, when asked to remedy the error of a claimant who, by an error of procedure, has issued the wrong originating process, should be as follows:"
i) The court's discretion should be used so as to further the overriding objective to deal with a case justly.
ii) In determining what is just the court must take account of all the circumstances of the case.
iii) In particular, it is necessary to consider whether, notwithstanding the claimant's error, the defendants were made aware of the nature of the claim which the claimant wished to bring.
iv) The order made by the court should not be disproportionate to the claimant's error of procedure.
v) The fact that the claimant's error was culpable is a relevant matter to take into account but will not necessarily be a bar to the court remedying the error.
vi) The fact that the defendants would be able to argue that any fresh issue of proceedings in the correct form would be time-barred is a relevant matter to take into account but will not necessarily be a bar to the court remedying the error.
Substance of the declarations sought
Conclusion on the Second Application
Addendum
After the draft judgment was sent out to counsel in the usual way, counsel raised two matters: the first concerning whether or not certain documents were within the scope of the judgment ordering disclosure and secondly whether or not there should be further anonymisation of the judgment.
As to the first, I have clarified this by making amendments to paragraphs 24, 29, 54 and 68 of the judgment.
As to the second matter I was referred to the case of Symbion Power LLC v Venco Imtiaz Construction Company [2017] EWHC 348 (TCC). I note in particular the following passage of the judgment at [90]:
90. There is a strong public interest in the publication of judgments, including those concerned with arbitrations, because of the public interest in ensuring appropriate standards in the conduct of arbitrations. That has to be weighed against the parties' legitimate expectation that arbitral proceedings and awards will be confidential to the parties. Mance LJ, as he then was, described it as a spectrum:
"40 … At the one end is the arbitration itself and at the other an order following a reasoned judgment under section 68 . In between is the hearing under section 68 . An order will normally give very limited information … even a section 68 hearing is likely to cover only limited aspects of the subject matter of the original arbitration … A reasoned judgment under section 68 will in likelihood disclose very much less about the subject matter of the arbitration than will have been covered during the section 68 hearing itself. Moreover, judges framing judgments are accustomed to concentrate on essentials, to avoid where possible unnecessary disclosure of sensitive material and in some cases to anonymise. …
41. When weighing the factors, a judge has to consider primarily the interest of the parties in the litigation before him or in other pending or imminent proceedings. … The concerns or fears of other parties cannot be a dominant consideration. Nor can there be any serious risk of their being deterred from arbitrating in England, if the court weighs the relevant factors appropriately. If, in the absence of other good reason for publication the court withholds publication where a party before it would suffer some real prejudice from publication or where the publication would disclose matters by the confidentiality of which one or both parties have set significant store, but publishes its judgments in other cases, businessmen can be confident that their privacy and confidentiality in arbitration will, where appropriate, be preserved. The limited but necessary interface between arbitration and the public court system means that more cannot be expected. There can be no question of withholding publication of reasoned judgments on a blanket basis of a generalised, and in my view, unfounded, concern that their publication would upset the confidence of the business community in English arbitration."[emphasis added]
In this case substantial changes were proposed by counsel including that neither the judgment of Hamblen J nor the judgment in Eurocom should be identified. The hearing before Hamblen J was in public and the judgment was public as was the judgment in Eurocom. In relation to this application, there is nothing in this judgment in relation to the details of the underlying dispute which was submitted to arbitration. Further as noted above C has consented to the application and D has raised no objection. Accordingly, publication would not disclose matters by the confidentiality of which one or both parties have set significant store. In the circumstances the public interest in the publication of judgments outweighs any confidentiality which the parties would expect to be preserved in relation to the arbitration. I note that the first respondent is not a party to the arbitration and in his witness statement expressed his position to be that he could not release details of the arbitration on the basis of general principles of confidentiality in arbitration. The fact that the references in the judgment could lead to the identification of B are not in my view sufficient to outweigh the public interest in the publication of judgements.