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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Idnekpoma v Amazon UK Services Ltd & Anor (Re Addendum to 15 June 2023 Judgment) [2023] EWHC 2018 (KB) (02 August 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/2018.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2018 (KB) |
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KINGS'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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GODSTIME BASSEY IDNEKPOMA |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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AMAZON UK SERVICES LIMITED |
First Defendant |
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PMP RECRUITMENT LIMITED |
Second Defendant |
____________________
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down remotely at 10.30 am on 02 August 2023 by circulation to the parties or their representatives by e-mail and by release to the National Archives
Introduction
Compliance with the November 2022 Order – the Claimant's response
- In his email of 25 November 2022, the Claimant stated that his "response to paragraph 3 of the order" was "DUTY of care by defendant" and stating that:
"The court really don't need to pursue restraint order because I am exhausted. I won't be disputing anything the court or judges say moving forward as I really have decided in focussing on my peace and health by taking time for myself and those I cherish most in life…….The order may have come as a shock but after few hours I actually felt liberated and I think this is a sign that this case although my answers may not be answered and my lost earnings not retrieved but still I will sleep well each day knowing I tried to look for answers to why I had to be deceived into an unknown term of employment."
- In his email of 26 November 2022, in an apparent change of heart overnight, the Claimant stated that he should not be required to pay Amazon's costs as he was making an application "to void the agreement we had due to being induced by misrepresentation. PMP
Recruitment should be liable for amazon cost as amazon admitted it agent lied to me by making false promises. (sic)"
- In his email of 27 November 2022, the Claimant made reference to the fact that he had made the application to set aside the consent order that he had entered into with PMP, claiming (again) that that order had arisen as a result of a misrepresentation. The application to set aside, completed by the Claimant on 27 November 2022 and stamped by the Court on 9 December 2022, sought to both set aside the consent order with PMP and add PMP as a second defendant to these proceedings. I dealt with this application in the judgment handed down on 15 June 2023;
- In his email of 28 November 2022, the Claimant stated that "as soon as the consent order is set aside and the court decide (sic) not to put a civil restraint order on me I will be making an application to add a claim of defamation against both defendants."
Compliance with the November 2022 Order – Amazon's response
a. The Court should, at the very least, make an Extended Civil Restraint Order ("ECRO") pursuant to CPR 2.3(1)(b) – it was said that the threshold for making such an order had been crossed as represented by:
- The underlying High Court claim against Amazon filed on 20 October 2021 which was dismissed under the terms the November 2022 Order; and
- The Claimant's application for contempt made against Amazon on 10 May 2021 which was dismissed under the terms of the same order; and
- The Claimant's claim against Amazon in the Employment Tribunal ("ET") which was dismissed by Regional Employment Judge Taylor ("REJ Taylor"). In her written reasons, REJ Taylor had described the Claimant's conduct in bringing the proceedings in the ET as being "scandalous, unreasonable and vexatious".
b. The Claimant posed a high risk that, if unrestrained, would issue further claims or applications – as to the latter, Amazon referred to the application that the Claimant had issued on 26 November 2022, to have set aside, the consent order with PMP as well as his email of 28 November 2022 in which he had said he would be adding "a claim of defamation against both defendants."
c. The making of a Limited Civil Restraint Order ("LCRO") would be inadequate as it would only extend until the current proceedings have ended. Given the length of time that the Claimant had been litigating against Amazon, a General Civil Restraint Order ("GCRO") should be considered;
d. In support of that submission, Amazon noted that it had been involved in litigation with the Claimant for nearly 4 years, in circumstances in which he had worked for it for a period of only 8 weeks ending in December 2018. It also observed that the Claimant had made "very serious allegations of forgery, corporate conspiracy and a bizarre (and completely unfounded) allegation that "amazon managers had developed a habit of humiliation black Africans with EEA right"";
e. A further justification for a GCRO was said to be that an order "restraining the Claimant in respect of certain courts and certain claims is probably not going to be sufficient since the Claimant has already demonstrated, by his behaviour, that he tends to bring any and every claim that occurs to him in any venue that he can."
a. Amazon was the successful party to the litigation and the Claimant was the unsuccessful party;
b. The Claimant's conduct certainly justified an award of costs on the standard basis – his conduct possibly justified an award on an indemnity basis but this was not being pursued;
c. The Claimant should therefore be ordered to pay its costs of both strike out applications (ie. the substantive claim and the contempt application) on the standard basis;
d. The costs claimed – solicitors fees of £88,746.23 and counsel's fees of £33,955.40 were proportionate and reasonably incurred;
e. The reasons advanced by the Claimant for not making an award of costs, namely his 'exhaustion' and 'anxiety' together with an assertion that PMP should pay Amazon's costs, were not in fact reasons why he should not have an award made against him;
f. The Claimant had refused to engage with Amazon's reasonable attempts to settle his claim – Amazon provided a clip of without prejudice correspondence to support that assertion - and did not give consideration to any realistic settlement proposal.
Compliance with the Order of 15 June 2023 – the Claimant's response
a. He had now made an application "to add cordant people, and Mr Jamie Reynolds as they were the people with significant amount of control at the time of MR Ashwin their representee deliberate act of fraud, and at the time of my alleged fraudulent employment with the company 03485614"
b. He was in court "due to a fraudulent misrepresentation by MR Ashwin Vara of PMP recruitment now of Challenge TRG recruitment……..My stance is I was deceived into the temporary role with the promise of a permanent job and amazon even admit to support my claim that pmp recruitment did lied to me" (sic)
c. He then set out lengthy submissions asserting that based on the judgment of REJ Taylor in his ET claim "I STILL REMAIN AN EMPLOYEE OF PMP RECRUITMENT NOW CHALLENGE TRG RECRUITMENT." In the course of his submissions, he made repeated reference to the Grounds of Resistance that had been filed by PMP in the ET."
consent order which he had unsuccessfully applied to have set aside. The next day, 16 June 2023, he sent a further email to the Court stating as follows:
"Please disregard my previous application form as I have just discovered the companies my employers were hiding under to commit fraud against me are now dissolved which means I have to catch them individually for the act of fraud. These individuals are my alleged employers and they all should be served."
"Cordant people limited was the person with significant amount of control of the company which fraudulently promised me a job and also the company whom have deceived the employment tribunal by stating I was still an employee. I believe I was a victim of fraud and MODERN-DAY slavery.
I have been looking for my alleged employers in proceedings and I have finally caught them!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
He then listed no less than 13 names of those who he presumably was claiming to be his employers.
"THE THREE DEFENDANT (sic) HAVE PRODUCED STATEMENTS BOTH WRITTEN AND VOCAL STATEMENT THAT HAVE INFLUENCED PROCEEDING.
All defendant (sic) have lied in their statement. They have all allegedly corrupted the administration of justice."
"I believe with my response to the order there should be enough evidence for the judge to ask my horrible employers to release all the money they owe me which is £105,600 from 2019 to present…….
Considering the amount is more than £50,000 I would like to know if I should make a separate application to the high court or the judge could consider this asap. As we all know this is not an award but an assets of mine illegally seized by my employers or slave masters.
……..
They have made me redundant illegally for those years and I have just calm down gently but I have now decided to go after my legal right since they know to be masters of illegal activities."
- At 13.16 on 29 June, he wrote raising a concern about whether his written representation of 15 June 2023 (referred to above) had reached the court and suggesting that he feared that PMP:
"may have people hijacking and deleting my responses and writing to the judge. This is not my accusing the court of any wrongdoing, I'm just being careful considering both defendants are without any care or any fear by indirectly admitting to corrupting the employment court proceeding with their produced fraudulent p.45."
- At 05.36 on 30 June, he wrote as follows:
"First, I will like to apologise for outburst and plead for the court to have mercy on me. I am ready to move on with this case and will be happy with any decision to court decide it's fair.
……..
I have decided to accept my fate because I have actually been acting like the court owe me something or is obliged to help me. It's still a civil matter at the end of the day and the court as I have read will not take any side.
………
The claims may not go my way and the first defendant may get their cro application but I will always be proud looking back I made top Lawyers sweat their pants defending a cause they know fully well their clients would all be in prison if it wasn't classified civil.
I thank the court for its patience with me, and also tolerating my outburst. I am ready to move on."
- At 10.36 on 30 June, he wrote suggesting that a CRO "won't be fair" and suggesting that Amazon should:
"pay for all my losses. And it's very heartless of them to even try applying for that cro. Very very heartless and the court should increase my loss by %25 for their inhumane heartlessness."
"……all the damages I have sustained from its agent's fraudulent misrepresentation already agreed to be known by defendant (sic) in this proceeding."
The Legal Framework
a. Under CPR 2.3, there are three possible options open to the Court:
- An LCRO which prevents the making of further applications in existing proceedings;
- An ECRO which restrains a party from issuing certain claims or making applications in specified courts; and
- A GCRO which restrains a party from issuing any claim or making any application in specified courts.
b. The threshold for the making of a CRO, is that the conduct of the relevant party must properly be categorised as "vexatious or abuse; obsessive persistence; and the refusal to take no for an answer" as opposed to "getting things wrong" - per Nicklin J in Churchill Limited v The Open College Network [2018] EWHC 457 (QB) at paragraph 16.
c. In Nowak v NMC [2013] EWHC 1932, Leggatt J (as he then was) identified (at paragraphs 63-70) a three-fold test for the making of a CRO as follows:
- Has the litigant persistently issued claims or made applications which are totally without merit?
- Does an objective assessment of the risk which the litigant poses demonstrate that, if unrestrained, he will issue further claims or make further applications which are an abuse of the court's process?
- What order, if any, is necessary and proportionate to protect the court's process from abuse? This question should be approached by asking the question "what is the least restrictive form of order shown to be required?"
a. An LCRO may be made where a party has made 2 or more applications (in the same set of proceedings) which are totally without merit;
b. An ECRO may be made where a party has persistently made claims or made applications which are totally without merit. "Persistently" is generally recognised as meaning on at least 3 occasions – see Sartipy v Tigris Industries Inc [2019] 1 WLR 5892, per Males LJ at paragraph 28;
c. A GRCO may be made only where a party has persistently issued claims or made applications which are totally without merit and the circumstances are such that an ECRO would not be sufficient or appropriate. This will tend to be the case where there is evidence of a litigant making allegations across a range of claims and, following the judgment of the Court of Appeal in R(Kumar) v Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs [2007] 1 WLR 536 (per Brooke LJ at paragraph 60):
"..adopting a scattergun approach to litigation on a number of grievances without necessarily exhibiting such an obsessive approach to a single topic that an extended CRO can appropriately be made against him/her".
"If the court of its own initiative….dismisses an application and it considers the application is totally without merit
(a) the court's order must record that fact; and
(b) the court must at the same time consider whether it is appropriate to make a civil restraint order."
The Claimant's most recent applications
Should a CRO be made?
a. His contempt application dated 1 February 2022, which was dismissed under the terms of the November 2022 Order;
b. His application to have the consent order against TMP set aside which was dismissed under the June 2023 Order;
c. His application of 16 June 2023 which I have dismissed as set out above pursuant to CPR3.3(4);
d. His application of 18 June 2023, which I have dismissed on a like basis;
e. His application of 1 July 2023, which I have again dismissed on a like basis;
f. His application of 4 July, which is the last of the four applications dismissed under the terms of the order that I make pursuant to this addendum judgment.
appropriate and should apply so as to restrain the Claimant for issuing claims or application in any court which involve, are related or touch upon or lead to these proceedings.
Costs