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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Pike & Anor v The Indian Hotels Company Ltd [2013] EWHC 4096 (QB) (19 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/4096.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 4096 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) William Jack Pike (2) Kelly Josephine Doyle |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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The Indian Hotels Company Limited |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Neil Block QC & Mr Bernard Doherty (instructed by DAC Beachcroft) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 2 December 2013 – 4 December 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Stewart :
Introduction
(i) There be a declaration that the Court has no jurisdiction to try this claim.
(ii) The Orders of Master Fontaine extending the period of validity of the claim form and giving permission to serve it outside the jurisdiction be set aside.
(iii) The service of the claim form and/or the claim form be set aside.
(iv) The claim be dismissed.
(v) The Claimants do pay the Defendants' costs of the application and the claim, such costs be subject to a detailed assessment if not agreed.
Alternatively
(vi) The claim be stayed.
(vii) The Claimants do pay the Defendants' costs of the claim to be subject to a detailed assessment if not agreed
- because the Defendant contends that the English court has no jurisdiction to try this claim or should not exercise any jurisdiction which it has.
Procedural History
24 November 2011: Claim form issued.
17 January 2012: Letter of claim dated 18 November 2011 sent to the Defendants on 21 December 2011 as incomplete faxed copy, a complete copy being received by the Defendants by post on 17 January 2012.
24 January 2012: Defendants reply denying that the English Court has jurisdiction and in any event denying liability.
8 February 2012: Claimants' solicitors write to the Defendants requesting a meeting to discuss the case "before proceedings are issued and served."
22 March 2012: Date of the Particulars of Claim.
22 March 2012: Claimants purport to effect service at 45 – 51 Buckingham Gate, London, the offices of St James Court Hotel Limited, a company related to the Defendants through common ultimate ownership. (The claim form itself identified the correct address of the Defendants in Mumbai).
4 April 2012: The Defendants file an Acknowledgement of Service.
18 April 2012: The Defendants issue an application challenging the jurisdiction and alternatively contending that the court should not exercise any jurisdiction it has. A ground for challenging the jurisdiction is that service at the London address was not effective.
9 May 2012: Master Fontaine gives permission at a without notice hearing to serve the claim form on the Defendants out of the jurisdiction at the Mumbai address identified on the claim form. The claim is pleaded in Contract and Tort, but permission to serve out of the jurisdiction is sought only on the basis of the claim in Tort. Master Fontaine extends time for service of the claim form to 9 February 2013, the Claimants' solicitors having filed evidence that service in India could take a considerable time.
31 August 2012: Decision of Master Fontaine refusing the Claimants applications for disclosure and information, aimed at establishing that the London address was a proper place which to serve the Defendants. Master Fontaine gives directions for a hearing to determine the question of whether service has been properly effected on the Defendants at the London address.
4 February 2013: Claimants agree not to rely on service at the London address. The Defendants agree that service can be effected at its solicitors' London office on the basis that it would be treated for all purposes as if that were service at the Defendants' offices in Mumbai pursuant to the permission granted by Master Fontaine on 9 May 2012, and that the Defendants' right to challenge would be the same as if service had been effected in Mumbai.
1 March 2013: Defendants' application the subject of this hearing.
The Issues for Determination
(i) Does the English Court have jurisdiction to hear the Claimants' claim in accordance with CPR 6.36, 6.37 and Practice Direction 6B?
(ii) Should the Order of Master Fontaine made on 9 May 2012 without notice to the Defendants and extending time for service of the claim form be set aside?
(iii) Are the English Courts the forum conveniens for this claim?
The First Issue: Jurisdiction
6.36
"In any proceedings to which rule 6.32 or 6.33 does not apply, the Claimant may serve a claim form out of the jurisdiction with the permission of the court if any of the grounds set out in paragraph 3.1 of Practice Direction 6B apply.
6.37
(1) An application for permission under rule 6.36 must set out –
(a) which ground in paragraph 3.1 of Practice Direction 6B is relied on;
(b) that the claimant believes that the claim has a reasonable prospect of success; and
(c) the defendant's address or, if not known, in what place the defendant is, or is likely, to be found.
……
(3) The court will not give permission unless satisfied that England and Wales is the proper place in which to bring the claim."
Practice Direction 6B provides:
"3.1 The claimant may serve a claim form out of the jurisdiction with the permission of the court under rule 6.36 where –
….
(9) A claim is made in tort where:
(a) damage was sustained within the jurisdiction; or
(b) the damage sustained resulted from an act committed within the jurisdiction."
(i) Can the Claimants satisfy the Court that in relation to the Defendants there is a serious issue to be tried on the merits?
(ii) Can the Claimants satisfy the Court that there is a good arguable case that the Claimant falls within paragraph 3.1(9)(a) of Practice Direction 6B? A "good arguable case" means that one side has a much better argument than the other.
(Ultimo) Holdings and Investment Limited v Kyrgyz Mobil Tel Limited [2011] UKPC 7 [2012] 1WLR 1804 at paragraph 71.
The Defendants concede for the purposes of this hearing that the Claimants satisfy the first test, namely a serious issue is to be tried on the merits. Thus the only question for the court to determine is the second one.
Booth v Phillips [2004] EWHC 1437 (Comm) a decision of Nigel Teare QC (as he then was)
Cooley v Ramsey [2008] EWHC 129 (QB) a decision of Tugendhat J
Wink v Croatio Osiguranje D.D. [2013] EWHC 1118 (QB) a decision of Haddon-Cave J
Stylianou v Toyoshima [2013] EWHC 2188 (QB) a decision of Sir Robert Nelson.
Because the Defendants' arguments have been already dealt with in some detail, I shall give my reasons for rejecting them as briefly as possible. The doctrine of precedent requires that I follow these decisions unless I am convinced that they are wrong. R v Manchester Coroner ex p Tal [1985] 1 Q.B. 67 @ 81A-B
(i) There is no reference to the damage which completes the cause of action in the rule and it therefore should be given its ordinary and natural meaning, namely harm which has been sustained by the Claimant, whether physical or economic (paragraph 36).
(ii) The second part of the rule which refers to "the damage sustained resulted from an act committed within the jurisdiction" uses the definite article which is not in the first part of the rule. This suggests that it is sufficient for the purposes of sub paragraph (a) that some damage (not all of the damage) is sustained within the jurisdiction (paragraph 36).
(iii) To meet the objection that this gives rise to an improbably wide construction of the rule, the Court must be satisfied that it is appropriate to exercise that jurisdiction. This involves considering whether England is the forum in which the case could most suitably be tried for the interest of all the parties and for the ends of justice (paragraph 37).
(iv) Whilst Commonwealth authorities cannot determine the issue which depends upon the wording of the CPR, decisions of the Appellate Courts in both Canada and Australia support that construction (paragraph 44).
(i) Before 1 January 1987 RSC order 11 rule 1(1)(h) required a plaintiff to establish that the action was "founded on a Tort committed within the jurisdiction". The test was "where in substance did the cause of action arise?" (Distillers Co Ltd v Thompson [1971] AC 458 at 468H).
(ii) On 1 January 1987 the rule changed such that the new RSC order 11 rule 1(1)(f) became "the claim is founded on a Tort and the damage was sustained, or resulted from an act committed, within the jurisdiction." The change was made to give effect to Article 5(3) of the Brussels Convention and the decision of the European Court in Handelskwekerij G.J. Bier B.V. v Mines Potasse d'Alsace S.A. [1978] QB 708.
Metal und Rohstoff A.G. v Donaldson Lufkin & Jenrette Inc [1991] QB 391 at 437
ABCI v Banqe Franc-Tunisienne [2003] EWCA Civ 205 at paragraph 43.
(iii) The European Rules do not allow indirect secondary damage to found jurisdiction.
Dumez France v Hessische Landesbank (C-220/88) [1990] ECR 1-49
Marinari v Lloyds Bank plc ...C-364/94) [1995] ECR 1 – 2719 [1996] QB 217
ABCI case at paragraphs 43-44.
(iv) This is all accepted and is in line with the original Bier case where the European Court held that where an act occurred in one Member State and the damage occurred in another, the Claimant could sue the Defendant in the Courts of either state. So, the Dutch Claimant could sue for damage caused to his seed beds in his nursery in the Netherlands as a result of the Defendant polluting the Rhine in France.
(v) Given the above, the Court should apply normal principles of interpretation to the rule namely: delegated legislation is construed in the same way as an Act, the starting point is to ascertain the legislative intention and the person seeking to understand that intention must do so in the light of the enactment and its purpose. The interpretation must be an informed one (Bennion on Statutory Interpretation 5th Edition, 2008, pages 263, 469 and 585). See also the comments of Lindley MR in Re Mayfair Property Co [1898] 2 Ch 28 at 35 and Lord Simon in Black-Clawson International Ltd v Papierwerke Waldhof-Aschassenburg A.G [1975] A C 591 at 647.
(vi) Therefore since the pre 1987 law would not have allowed indirect secondary damage to found jurisdiction and since the purpose of the change was to align the RSC (subsequently CPR) with the European rules which do not allow such a founding of jurisdiction, the rules should be interpreted consistently with the European cases.
(Stilyanou [47] – [54]).
The Second Question: Should the Order of 9 May 2012 Extending Time be Set Aside?
7.5(2)
"Where the claim form is to be served out of the jurisdiction, the claim form must be served in accordance with section IV of Part 6 within 6 months of the date of issue
7.6
(1) The claimant may apply for an order extending the period for compliance with rule 7.5.
(2) The general rule is that an application to extend the time for compliance with rule 7.5 must be made –
(a) within the period specified by rule 7.5; or
(b) where an order has been made under this rule, within the period for service specified by that order.
……
(4) An application for an order extending the time for compliance with rule 7.5-
(a) must be supported by evidence; and
(b) may be made without notice."
"7.6.2
Applications under 7.6(2)
In Marshall v Maggs reported under Collier v Williams [2006] EWCA Civ 20 the Court of Appeal held that the court can allow an application to extend time prospectively under rule 7.6(2) without being satisfied that the Claimant has taken all reasonable steps to comply with rule 7.5 as is required in a retrospective application under rule 7.6(3) but the court should still follow the guidance set out in Hashtroodi v Hancock [2004] EWCA Civ 652…
FG Hawkes (Western) Ltd v Beli Shipping Co Ltd [2009] EWHC 1740; … followed Marshall v Maggs and emphasised that the better the reasons for not having served in time the more likely that an extension would be granted…
Supported by evidence
"…the Court of Appeal has decided that for an extension to be granted the Claimant must put forward a valid reason. In Hashtroodi v Hancock …the Claimant applied ex parte for an extension of time of three weeks to serve the claim form one day before the expiry of the claim form. The extension was granted. …the Court of Appeal said the power to extend time prospectively must be exercised in accordance with the overriding objective which means a valid reason must be advanced in the application; no reason was advanced in this case – the delay was due to the solicitor's incompetence and the extension should not have been granted."
"When deciding whether to grant an extension of time under CPR 7.6(2), the court is required to consider how good a reason there was for the failure to serve in time (assuming that the application is dealt with after the end of the 4 months period): the stronger the reason, the more likely the court will be to extend time; and the weaker the reason, the less likely. This involves making a judgment about the reason why service has not been effected within the 4 month period. It is a more subtle exercise than that required under CPR r7.6(3) which provides that unless all reasonable steps have been taken, the court cannot extend time."
(i) Although, as appears from the Appendix, the hearing before Master Fontaine on 9 May 2012 was formally without notice, both sides agreed that it should be without notice and the Defendant was served with all documents and agreed that the hearing should proceed in that way. The Defendants did not seek to adjourn.
(ii) In the agreement made on 4 February 2013 (see paragraph 4 above) the Defendants reserved the right to contest jurisdiction but did not reserve the right to contest the extension of time by Master Fontaine.
(iii) The Defendants could have applied, and should have applied discretely, to set aside the extension of time shortly after the order was made by Master Fontaine.
I reject these submissions, following the same numbering, for these reasons:
(i) The hearing on 9 May 2012 was formally without notice. The Defendants were not a party to the proceedings at that stage. They cannot be criticised for allowing the hearing to go on without notice. This is especially so as they could not have been in a position to take full instructions so as properly to contest the extension of time application. Nor can they be criticised for failing to seek an adjournment.
(ii) In the agreement dated 4 February 2013 it was provided "the Defendant will have the same rights to contend that the English court does not have jurisdiction to try this claim and/or should not exercise any jurisdiction which it does have as if service had been effected at the appropriate office of the Defendant in India." Earlier it was stated "The Defendant does not by this agreement forfeit or waive any rights to contend that the English court does not have jurisdiction to try this claim and/or should not exercise any jurisdiction which it does have." I do not accept that this wording was not apt to preserve the Defendants right to make an application setting aside the extension of time. This is particularly the case if one has regard to the explanation of the word "jurisdiction" by the Court of Appeal in Hoddinott v Persimmion Homes (Wessex) Limited [2007] EWCA Civ 1203; 2008 1WLR 806 at [23].
(iii) The Defendants cannot be criticised for failing to make the application prior to their having been properly served. This only took place by reason of the agreement dated 4 February 2013. Until that date they were not a party.
(i) The first meeting with the Claimants (ie. the First Claimant's father and the Second Claimant) was on 10 February 2009. At that stage the First Claimant was still an inpatient in hospital. Some investigations were carried out during 2009, but the First Claimant spent that year and until September 2010 trying to come to terms with his life as a paraplegic. The First Claimant signed a formal retainer agreement on 29 September 2010.
(ii) Mr Levy made enquiries in relation to a petition to the Indian Supreme Court seeking a direction that the owners of the Taj Mahal Palace pay compensation.
(iii) On 7 February 2011 the First Claimant instructed his solicitors to proceed with the investigation of the claim against the owners of the hotel. Medical records were obtained and Mr Levy began to seek evidence as to liability. He needed to know whether there was a reasonable prospect of success and whether his firm would be prepared to act under a conditional fee agreement and also be able to obtain ATE insurance.
(iv) Counsel were instructed in April 2011. Liability investigations continued. The summer of 2011 was a difficult period for the two Claimants who were having relationship difficulties which culminated in the Second Claimant leaving their shared home in October 2011.
(v) Investigations continued and Mr Levy spoke with a number of potential experts about what had happened in Mumbai and of the standards expected from the hospitality industry in such a situation.
(vi) By the time of the third anniversary of the attacks, Mr Levy still did not have sufficient evidence to advise the client or the ATE insurance providers as to the likely prospect of the claim succeeding. He issued the claim form protectively in England on 24 November 2011, naming four corporate entities that investigations had revealed might be regarded as the owner and/or proprietor of the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel.
(vii) During December 2011 and January 2012 he continued to carry out investigations as to the nature and extent of the business operated by the Defendants in London and to seek liability evidence. He was seeking to contact experts in the hospitality and security industries. He communicated with at least six potential liability experts.
(viii) Counsel's Advice was being obtained and the ATE insurers were being consulted.
(ix) Investigations were also continuing as to the prospect of proceedings in India. Mr Levy ascertained that the petition to the Supreme Court in India had been made, because the Claimants did not believe they would be able to obtain justice by proceeding in the Bombay High Court owing to delays endemic in such proceedings. He also ascertained that there would be no funding available for his clients to sue in India.
(x) Professor Gunaratna was instructed as a liability expert on 8 February 2012. On 14 March 2012 he gave a very favourable Advice on liability in a telephone conversation. In the light of that advice Counsel were able to advise on liability and ATE insurance was secured.
(xi) At that stage there was sufficient evidence upon which to base a belief that Buckingham Gate, London, constituted a place of business of the Defendants.
(xii) Once the Defendants' Solicitors had issued the application on 18 April 2012 he acted very promptly in issuing an application for permission to serve out of the jurisdiction. In his witness statement in support of the application he set out in some detail the basis on which the Claimants believed that the Defendants could be served as of right within the jurisdiction. That decision was based on what appeared at the time to be good evidence.
(xiii) In the period February, March and early April 2012 Mr Levy was also pursuing enquiries of the Indian law expert as to the matters that might affect forum. These enabled him to deal with these matters fully in his witness statement of 23 April 2012 in support of the application to serve out of the jurisdiction.
(xiv) Initially Mr Levy hoped that service could be effected within the six month period of validity which was due to expire on 24 May 2012, a month after the application for permission to serve out was made. However he was then advised by Senior Master Whitaker that, in his experience, the Indian Central Authority were taking an inordinately long time to serve proceedings following a request made by the High Court in London. He therefore pursued enquiries of the foreign process section as set out in his second witness statement dated 3 May 2012. In view of their response and in order to protect his clients' position, he sought a nine month extension of time for service out. This was granted by Master Fontaine.
(xv) Indeed, as a matter of information, it appears that service has not yet been effected by the Indian Central Authority on the Defendants in Mumbai. However that has been overtaken by events, namely the agreement of 4 February 2013.
The Third Issue: Are the English Courts the Forum Conveniens for this Claim?
"The court will not give permission unless satisfied that England and Wales is the proper place in which to bring the claim."
Lord Goff in Spiliada at 477G-478 E.
"A second, and more fundamental, point of distinction…is that in the Order 11 cases the plaintiff is seeking to persuade the court to exercise its discretionary power to permit service on the defendant outside the jurisdiction. Statutory authority has specified the particular circumstances in which that power may be exercised, but leaves it to the court to decide whether to exercise its discretionary power in a particular case, while providing that leave shall not be granted "unless it shall be made sufficiently to appear to the court that the case is a proper one for service out of the jurisdiction" (see R.S.C., Ord. 11, r.4(2)).
Third, it is at this point that special regard must be had for the fact stressed by Lord Diplock in the Amin Rasheed case… the jurisdiction exercised under Order 11 may be "exorbitant". This has long been the law. In Société Generale de Paris v. Dreyfus Brothers (1885) 29 ChD 239, 292-243, Pearson J. said:
"It becomes a very serious question .... whether this court ought to put a foreigner, who owes no allegiance here, to the inconvenience and annoyance of being brought to contest his rights in this country, and I for one say, most distinctly, that I think this court ought to be exceedingly careful before it allows a writ to be served out of the jurisdiction."
That statement was subsequently approved on many occasions…the effect is not merely that the burden of proof is on the Plaintiff to persuade the court that England is the appropriate forum for the trial of the action, but that he has to show that this is clearly so. In other words, the burden is, quite simply, the obverse of that applicable where a stay is sought of proceedings started in this country as of right."
(i) Lord Templeman at 465C-D:
"The factors which the court is entitled to take into account in considering whether one forum is more appropriate are legion. The authorities do not, perhaps cannot, give any clear guidance as to how these factors are to be weighed in any particular case. Any dispute over the appropriate forum is complicated by the fact that each party is seeking an advantage and may be influenced by considerations which are not apparent to the judge or considerations which are not relevant for his purpose."
(ii) Lord Goff at 480B-D agreed with the statement of Lord Wilberforce
"that in order to decide whether the case is a proper one the court must take into account the nature of the dispute, the legal and practical issues involved, such questions as local knowledge, availability of witnesses and their evidence and expense."
(iii) Lord Goff at 483C-D
"But the underlying principle requires that regard must be had to the interests of all the parties and the ends of justice; and these considerations may lead to a different conclusion in other cases."
"the English courts would need to hear the evidence of a significant number of the Defendant's staff involved as well as the guests who were in the hotel during the attack. Very few of the staff are mother tongue English speakers. The majority of the guests in the hotel on the night were also Indian Nationals. Therefore the principal witnesses are located in India."
Mr Goel says:
"there would be significant logistical and financial implications in arranging for them to give evidence in the context of proceedings before the courts of England and Wales. In terms of the hotel staff, it would also have implications for the running of the hotel."
He makes two further points of note:
"a. The English courts would need to hear evidence in relation to the acts of the Indian Government Officials and representatives from each of these agencies. Any issues as to the adequacy of the response of these bodies are highly sensitive and personal to the Indian State and should be considered in the Indian Courts.
b. The events of 26 November 2008 – 29 November 2008 affected many individuals at IHCL on a personal level. I mean no disrespect to the English Courts when I say that the idea that their conduct should be reviewed by a foreign court who cannot have a full sense of the local circumstances is disturbing."
Messrs Kachawa and Kapadia signed a joint statement on 19 November 2013. Many matters were uncontroversial but they both had to give evidence on some important points in dispute. Before I turn to the matters on which I need to make findings of fact. I will deal with some factors which I have to consider in determining whether it would be unjust to stay the case.
(i) Breach of duty would have to be tested against local standards. As Mr Kapadia said "the standard of care to be expected from a Defendant depends on a consideration by the court of the standard prevailing in the area in which the Tort is alleged. An assessment of the appropriate standard depends on an assessment by the judge of the local standards reasonably to be expected. This assessment may in part turn on evidence, but will also turn on the judge's knowledge, understanding and experience of the place in which the Tort is alleged to have occurred."
Thus the English courts will have to determine the case by reference to the Indian standards. I regard this as a matter of some, but not a very strong, significance which I need to weigh in the balance. English courts are well used to determining such cases.
(ii) There is not so much personal injury litigation brought in the Mumbai High Court. The gist of the expert evidence was that English law is more developed in the Tort of negligence. The present case requires a court to scrutinise the duty of an occupier to visitors injured by acts of war/terrorism perpetrated by third parties.
Neither Indian expert professed to be able to deal with this point in detail. It is right to say that there is some risk that an English court will be required to determine what the law of India would be to cover the Claimants' claim against the Defendants, in circumstances where there is no clear authority in the Indian courts. However, I can put in no higher than that. Again this is a factor which I take into account but I do not give it a great deal of weight.
"6.2 Consequent upon an amendment to the CPC in 2002, in every case examination in chief of a witness shall be on Affidavit. Cross-examination and re-examination of the witness (if any) can be by the Court or by a Commissioner appointed by it. In most matters (especially where substantial oral evidence is involved) the cross-examination and re-examination is through a Commissioner."
In the joint statement Mr Kapadia broadly agreed with the above but said that evidence of lay witnesses can always be taken orally. He added that he thought that a court would want to hear oral evidence because there are a lot of questions of liability and the judge would like to see the demeanour of the witnesses. He said that also there may be some confidential documents referred to by a witness and it is the judge's duty to consider whether such documents are too private or secret to be kept away from the public gaze. Doing the best I can, I believe that in India a substantial amount of evidence would be on commission, though a judge may wish some central witnesses to give oral evidence. I accept that it is more convenient to the Defendants and the Defendants' witnesses to have a trial in India. Nevertheless, it is my judgment that they would not be significantly prejudiced by a trial in England because (a) the central witnesses would be able to travel and/or (b) the main witnesses could give evidence by video link and/or (c) a number of witnesses are likely to be agreed or their evidence will be relatively uncontroversial and able to be taken on commission. Documents could readily be scanned and made available to the parties in electronic form in England and Wales. Any critical ones could be printed off and bundled. Mr Kapadia mentioned the possibility of confidential, secret information or documents and in particular secret state material being relevant. In the Bombay High Court the judge would be able to determine relevance, but he said that such evidence would not be available to the English Court. However, I am not persuaded that there would be any significantly greater problem for the English court as compared with the Bombay High Court. This is particularly the case having regard to the criminal trial which examined a great deal of evidence and the State of Maharashtra Enquiry, whose report was published on 21 December 2009. In addition there is a Right to Information Act 2005 in India. Finally, the Defendants made the point that, although the language of the Indian High Court and Appellate Court is English, a number of witnesses will not have English as their first language. They say that nevertheless the judges and lawyers in the Bombay High Court will often be familiar with the first languages spoken by witnesses. Also, that any judge or advocate would be able to understand English Hindi Marathi and Gujarati. To the extent that evidence is adduced before a Commissioner in India (for use either in India or in England), this matter does not assist the Defendants. Insofar as translators would be required in England there is some merit in this point in favour of the Defendants, but it is not a matter of great weight.
"18. In the present era, the legal profession, once known as a noble profession, has been converted into a commercial undertaking. Litigation has become so expensive that it has gone beyond the reach and means of a poor man. For a longtime, the people of the nation have been convinced that a case would not culminate during the life time of the litigant and is beyond the ability of astrologer to anticipate his fate…. Any order passed by the Trial Court on the application of substitution of legal representative(s) is generally challenged time and again right up to this Court with the proceedings in the Courts below remaining stayed."
(Although only one case and therefore possibly not representative, it appears that the civil appeal was lodged in 2005, and decided in the Supreme Court in 2013, a delay of 8 years. However it would not be right to draw much, if anything, from this.)
"In contrast, when an appeal is pending in a High Court, dates of hearing are not fixed periodically. Once the appeal is admitted, it virtually goes into storage and is listed before the court only when it is ripe for hearing or when some application seeking an interim direction is filed. It is common for appeals pending in High Courts not to be listed at all for several years. (In some courts where there is a huge pendency, the non-hearing period may be as much as 10 years or even more)…. The High Courts are overloaded with appeals and the litigant is in no way responsible for non- listing for several years."
a. The First Claimant is a man who is not quite 34 years of age. A favourable decision in England would give him the money substantially to improve his standard of living and enable him to better come to terms with his disability when he is about 36 years of age. If the proceedings have to be brought in India then he would be something like 50 to 55 years of age before that occurs. Further, proceedings in England, if the claim fails, will be over and done with in a couple of years or so. In the event of failure, the Claimants will have to put this matter behind them and get on with their lives as best they can.
b. Five years have already passed and the availability of witnesses and the quality of their recollections will have been affected. It seems very likely that whatever recollection they retain over the next couple of years will be significantly undermined if the delay is 15 to 20 years. Further, witnesses are much more likely to be alive and/or available for an English trial than a trial in Mumbai.
"There is a substantial body of evidence that if this case were to proceed in the High Court at Bombay the trial would be delayed for many years. …many actions do not reach trial in less than ten years and it would be wholly exceptional for an action to come on for trial in less than six years. Delay of this magnitude seems to me to be a denial of justice. It is in the interests of justice that actions should come to trial at a time when the witnesses can reasonably be expected to have some recollection of the events in question…"
(i) The Claimants' funding of their claims to judgment.
(ii) After judgment, and if the Claimants are successful, a costs award in their favour.
(iii) After judgment and if the Claimants are unsuccessful, the Claimants' responsibility for their own costs and for the Defendants' costs.
(i) It is common ground that if the Claimants were successful in India then they would not obtain a worthwhile costs order against the Defendants. Nevertheless the Defendants have neutralised this point by offering an undertaking that they would pay the Claimants' reasonable costs of the action in India, such costs be calculated as if assessed on a standard basis in England. The Defendants are prepared to enter into discussion with the Claimants, should I order this case be stayed in England, so as to ensure that this undertaking is effective.
(ii) Given that a costs award in India is extremely modest, if the Claimants fail then their liability for the Defendants costs would be minimal.
(iii) If the Claimants fail, they would be responsible for their own costs if the claim was brought in India. I do not regard that fact as being a matter which leads to a denial of justice.
(i) Mr Levy's witness statement dated 23 April 2012 says "the Claimants can't afford to pay lawyers to act on their behalf…the Claimants quite simply cannot afford to pursue the claim in India."
(ii) The First Claimant's witness statement (paragraph 43) said that he lost his employment after the accident. He managed to get a job with an advertising company where he took employment as a copywriter. He is now freelancing as a copywriter.
(iii) The Second Claimant's witness statement shows that she is a producer for a media production company where she has worked since 2004.
(iv) Mr Havers QC told me that the First Claimant has received £175,000 from the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority. This was in October 2012. It is a final award (i) which he will have to pay back if he succeeds in this litigation; (ii) he needs this money in order to assist him to run his life and he cannot afford to risk it on litigation. He has received some £30,000 in charitable payments to pay for a wheel chair and aids and equipment so far.
(i) Connelly v RTZ Corporation plc [1998] AC 854. In this case the Plaintiff worked for four years in Namibia at a uranium mine operated by a Namibian subsidiary of the First Defendant, an English company. The judge found that the Plaintiff was impecunious and would be unable to obtain any sort of legal aid in Namibia to finance litigation, while in England legal aid would be available to him. Lord Goff stated 873 E-H:
"I therefore start from the position that, at least as a general rule, the court will not refuse to grant a stay simply because the plaintiff has shown that no financial assistance, for example in the form of legal aid, will be available to him in the appropriate forum, whereas such financial assistance will be available to him in England…. I cannot think that the absence of legal aid in the appropriate jurisdiction would of itself justify the refusal of a stay on the ground of forum non conveniens….The question, however, remains whether the plaintiff can establish that substantial justice will not in the particular circumstances of the case be done if the plaintiff has to proceed in the appropriate forum where no financial assistance is available."
(ii) Lubbe v Cape plc [2000] 1 WLR 1545. This was a group action claim begun in England by South African Citizens resident in South Africa against the Defendant, a company registered in England which owned a number of subsidiary companies in South Africa. They were claims based on asbestos exposure.
At page 1554 E-H Lord Bingham reviewed the Spiliada and Connelly cases pointing out that "it is only if the Plaintiff can establish that substantial justice will not be done in the appropriate forum that a stay will be refused (the Spiliada case, at p482; the Connelly case, at p873)." He then cited Lord Goff's speech in Connelly and continued (155E-F):
"In the Connelly case a majority of the House held that the case before it was such an exceptional case. The nature and complexity of the case was such that it could not be tried at all without the benefit of legal representation and expert scientific assistance, available in this country but not in the appropriate forum, Namibia. That being so, the majority of the House concluded that the Namibian forum was not one in which the case could be tried more suitably for the interests of all the parties and for the ends of justice. "
At 1557E-1559G Lord Bingham reviewed the material in the case before the House. One of the factors was that this was a group litigation case in England and that this procedure did not exist in South Africa. However he also said (1559F-G):
"If these proceedings were stayed in favour of the more appropriate forum in South Africa the probability is that the Plaintiffs would have no means of obtaining professional representation and the expert evidence which would be essential if these claims were to be justly decided. This would amount to a denial of justice. In the special and unusual circumstances of these proceedings, lack of the means, in South Africa, to prosecute these claims to a conclusion provides a compelling ground, at the second stage of the Spiliada test, for refusing to stay the proceedings here."
Conclusion on the Third Issue
Footnote
APPENDIX
Chronology November 2011 – May 2012
18 November 2011: Claimants' Solicitors send pre-action protocol letter of claim to Tata Limited at 18 Grosvenor Place, London and Taj Hotels Resorts and Palaces at 45 – 51 Buckingham Gate, London.
22 November 2011: Tata Limited letter to Claimants' Solicitors "we have received your letter…18 November 2011 by fax. We hereby wish to inform you that Tata Limited does not own the Indian Hotels Co Limited, nor the Taj Mahal Palace Hotels. As far as we are aware, the Indian Hotel Company Limited is a plc with headquarters in Taj Mahal Palace Hotel in Mumbai. Please arrange to forward your letter of claim to them. We also confirm that we are not able to accept service of the proceedings in respect of these claims."
23 November 2011: Claimants' Solicitors send letter of claim relating to Second Claimant to Tata Limited and Taj Hotels Resorts and Palaces.
24 November 2011: Claim form issued against the Defendants (and others) citing the Defendants' address as the Mumbai address.
21 December 2011: Claimants' Solicitors send letter by fax and by post to the Defendants in Mumbai enclosing copies of their letters of 18 November 2011 and 23 November 2011 and Tata's letter of 22 November 2011. "We should be grateful if could acknowledge receipt of these letters and treat them as if addressed to you. Please also inform us who will deal with these matters on your behalf. Will one of your England based companies do so? Alternatively if you intend instructing solicitors, kindly provide us with their details."
24 January 2012: Fax from Defendants to Claimants' Solicitors "We refer to your letter dated December 21 2011 sent to us by fax and post. We only received five pages by fax and the hard copy of the complete letter was received by us on January 17 2012. We dispute that the English courts have jurisdiction in this matter. The Indian Hotels Company Limited, a company incorporated under the Indian Companies Act 1956, having its registered office at Mandlik House, Mandlik Road, Mumbai – 4000001, India, owns and operates the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel, Mumbai. The incident in question being a terror attack on the city of Mumbai, as also at the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel, occurred in India. Thus, if at all there is a dispute that is required to be adjudicated, the appropriate forum is Mumbai, India….should you proceed with a claim in England against the Indian Hotels Company Limited we will dispute jurisdiction and reserve our position to seek to costs from your clients."
8 February 2012: Fax and Airmail from Claimants Solicitors to Defendants "…before proceedings are issued* and served, we would invite you to agree to meet on a without prejudice basis to explore the possibility of a mutually acceptable compromise …In the event that a mutually acceptable settlement cannot be reached, it will be necessary to deal with jurisdiction if you do seek to raise a challenge to the claim proceeding in England…. We remain of the view that England is clearly the most appropriate forum for the trial of these actions. However, in order for us to consider the statements made in your letter, kindly provide full evidence as to legal status of "Taj Hotels Resorts and Palaces". We also note that although you say your company is not a subsidiary of Tata Limited, it is of course referred to on your note paper as "A Tata Enterprise". Please therefore explain the nexus between your company and the Tata Group…"
*This was an error since proceedings had already been issued
22 February 2012: Defendants' fax to Claimants Solicitors. "…we reiterate there is no legal entity known as "Taj Hotels Resorts and Palaces". It is merely a trade name. It is reiterated that Indian Hotels Company Limited is not a subsidiary of Tata Limited. Tata Limited is an independent and separate company. …as is already set out in our earlier letter, jurisdiction for any dispute with your clients lies with the appropriate court in Mumbai, India. We do not wish to nominate solicitors in England to accept service. We do not consider it appropriate to respond to issues of alleged liability which you have raised, based on English law. Separately, while denying that English courts have jurisdiction, whether a claim is made in England or India, the issue of liability will, in any event, be determined in accordance with Indian law."
22 March 2012: Claimants' Solicitors purport to serve Defendants with the claim form and Particulars of Claim at 45 – 51 Buckingham Gate, London. (On the same day a copy is sent to the Defendants in Mumbai).
4 April 2012: Defendants' London solicitors (DAC Beachcroft) write to Claimants "We are instructed by Indian Hotels Company Limited to act on its behalf. We enclose a copy of the acknowledgment of service which we have today filed at court. We dispute that the court has jurisdiction in respect of this claim. Our application in support of our argument challenging jurisdiction will be served in the next 14 days."
18 April 2012: Defendants issue application notice seeking a declaration that the court has no jurisdiction to try the claim, purported service of the claim form be set aside and the claim be dismissed, together with further or alternative relief.
23 April 2012: Claimants' Solicitors issue application notice to serve the Defendants out of the jurisdiction. After Mr Levy's witness statement on 3 May 2012 this included an application for an extension of time to serve the Defendants out of the jurisdiction. The first witness statement of Russell Anthony Levy is dated 23 April 2012.
3 May 2012: Second witness statement of Mr Levy specifically in support of the application for an extension of time.
3 May 2012: Claimants' letter (by hand) to DAC Beachcroft informing them of the applications and that they would be heard on 9 May 2012 "if time permits". All documents in support of the application are served on DAC Beachcroft.
4 May 2012: Master Fontaine confirms date of 9 May. Claimants' Solicitors copy Defendants' Solicitors in to this confirmation.
8 May 2012: Email DAC Beachcroft to Claimants Solicitors noting amended timings and that Defendants have been able to get some instructions over the weekend. Also asking for clarification of the query raised in DAC Beachcroft's email the week before as to the status of the application.
8 May 2012: Mr Levy to DAC Beachcroft "I…look forward to receiving your proposals for tomorrow's hearing as soon as possible. I am puzzled by the last paragraph of your email – I didn't receive an email from you last week."
8 May 2012: DAC Beachcroft to Mr Levy forwarding previously received email which read "I confirm receipt of your letter and enclosures delivered yesterday afternoon. I am seeking my clients' instructions but do not anticipate I will have them today. If I am able to I will advise of their instructions over the weekend bearing in mind Monday is a bank holiday. For the avoidance of doubt please could you confirm whether you intended to serve your application and for it to become an inter-partes application or is it an ex parte application which you have provided us with a copy of."
8 May 2012: Mr Levy to DAC Beachcroft. "The Senior Master's view is that as you are on record and have already filed an acknowledgment, it would be best for the applications for permission to serve out of the jurisdiction and for the extension of time for service to be on notice."
8 May 2012: DAC Beachcroft email to Claimants' Solicitors "…your application for permission to serve out of the jurisdiction. That was issued as a without notice application. You sent us a copy late Thursday afternoon after Senior Master Whitaker directed that it be heard tomorrow by Master Fontaine time permitting. I do not know whether in sending us a copy of your application and supporting statement you intended to convert the hearing into an inter-partes one. Your recent email suggests so, but if that is what the Senior Master intended his note does not make that clear. In any event, if that is what was intended, we are not in a position to deal with it tomorrow. The application was not served as soon as practicable after it was filed and was not served three days before the hearing (given yesterday's bank holiday). In any event, even if served earlier, there would be no possibility of our client being able to deal with the application in such a short period. Your witness statement raises a number of controversial issues on which instructions from India will be needed and in justice we will need a matter of weeks rather than days to respond. I have tried my best to gain instructions over the weekend and whilst I have some instructions they do not address the detail of the issues raised…in order to try to find a practical solution however I would suggest the following. You use tomorrow appointment to pursue your application for permission to serve out of the jurisdiction but on the basis that it is a "without notice application and the Defendant reserves the right to challenge any service on India exactly the same way as if it had been notified in time for your intended application…".
8 May 2012: Email Mr Levy to Master Fontaine copied to DAC Beachcroft. "Ms Jefferson, who acts for the Defendant, and I have been able to agree that it is appropriate for you to deal with my application for permission to serve out of the jurisdiction first. We are also in agreement that the further directions that will be needed in this case will largely hinge upon the outcome of my application for permission to serve out of the jurisdiction and, accordingly, we would ask you to adjourn the directions application generally with permission to restore in order to give the parties an opportunity to reach agreement."
9 May 2012: Hearing before Master Fontaine.