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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 >> Jones v Chichester Harbour Conservancy & Ors [2017] EWHC 2270 (QB) (12 September 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/2270.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2270 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
B e f o r e :
BETWEEN
____________________
Lauren Stephanie Paxton Jones |
Claimant |
|
And |
||
(1) Chichester Harbour Conservancy (2) Church Commissioners For England (3) Matthew Sawday |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Christopher Kennedy QC of counsel instructed by Weightmans solicitors for the First Defendant.
Mr James Todd of counsel instructed by BLM solicitors for the Second Defendant.
Mr Benjamin Browne QC of counsel instructed by DAC Beachcroft solicitors for the Third Defendant.
Hearing date: 10th May 2017 with written submissions thereafter.
Handed down: 12 September 2017.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
(i) Caretech Community Services Ltd v Berry and Ors [2017] EWHC 1944 (QB).
(ii) Jones v Chichester Harbour Conservancy (this case)
(iii) Al-Haddad v British Broadcasting Corporation Claim No. HQ16D00807
This case
"1. The date for service of the claim form is extended to 17th January 2017."
The Rules
CPR 6.14 "A claim form served within the United Kingdom in accordance with this Part is deemed to be served on the second business day after completion of the relevant step under rule 7.5(1)."
CPR 7.5 "Where the claim form is served within the jurisdiction, the claimant must complete the step required by the following table in relation to the particular method chosen, before 12.00 midnight on the calendar day four months after the issue of the claim form.
Method of Service Step required First class post, document exchange… Posting, leaving with, delivering to or collection by the relevant service provider"
CPR 7.6(1) "The Claimant may apply for an order extending the period for compliance with rule 7.5."
Legal argument
"This arrangement marks a significant change from the effect which r7.5 had before October 1, 2008. The principal objective of the change was to reduce the instances in which the deemed date of service provisions had the effect of rendering service of claim forms out of time, with the result that, for the purpose of doing justice in individual cases, other provisions in the CPR that might be conceivably called in aid to rescue the claimant's claim … were pressed into uses for which they were not designed."
And at 6.14.3 p274 in that same publication:
"… it is important to notice that the question whether there has been compliance with the time limit fixed by rule 7.5 for service of a Claim Form within the jurisdiction … is determined, not by enquiring as to whether the deemed date for service fell within the period, but by asking whether the 'step required' was 'completed' within the period …"
Case law
"In my judgment these two rules, CPR 7.5 and 6.14, taken together draw a clear distinction between the date when service is actually effected, which is when the relevant step under 7.5 has been completed and the date two business days later when service is deemed to take place under CPR 6.14. If one asks oneself why that distinction is there, it is not as Mr Nicholls QC suggests because service does not actually occur until the deemed day, but because, whereas CPR 7.5 is looking at when actual service takes place, so that a Claimant who takes the requisite step, depending upon which method of service he employs, can be sure that he has served within the four months of validity of the claim form (thereby avoiding, if relevant, any limitation issues). CPR 6.14 is looking at when service will be deemed to have taken place for the purpose of other steps in the proceedings thereafter, beginning with the filing of an acknowledgement of service. In my judgment, that construction of the rules is supported not only by the reasoning of Green J. in the Ageas[1] case at 63-80, with which on this point I entirely agree, but by the wording of the rules themselves and by the various commentaries on the CPR, not only Blackstone's Civil Practice on which Mr Mill relied but, on a proper analysis, the notes to the White Book."
Decision
Para 19: "For claim forms served within the jurisdiction, CPR 7.7 still has reference to when service occurs, but CPR 7.5 does not; the unsurprising consequence, for that case, is that what must happen by the deadline stated by the Rule, to comply with CPR 7.5, is not the same as what must happen by the deadline set by the notice, for there has to be compliance with a CPR 7.7 notice."
Para. 20: "I do not agree with the claimants that the effect of CPR 6.14 is to fix the date on which service is taken to have occurred, for the sole purpose of fixing, and thus assessing compliance with, subsequent deadlines defined by reference to when service took place. That is an important consequential effect. In most cases where the claim form has been served within the jurisdiction, it may be the only effect of CPR 6.14 that will matter, because the validity of that service is not defined by reference to CPR 6.14. .... But the purpose and effect of the CPR deemed date of service always was, and remains, to fix the date on which service of a document is taken to have occurred for the purpose of assessing compliance with any deadline for achieving that service. That CPR 7.5 no longer imposes such a deadline, in the case of claim forms served within the jurisdiction, has not changed that. Put more shortly, CPR 6.14 fixes the date on which service of a claim form occurs, for all, not only for some, purposes."
Para 24 (ii) "CPR 7.5(1) now defines the temporal validity of a claim form, for service within the jurisdiction, by the obligation imposed on the claimant to complete the 'step required' within four months from issue. It therefore defines what must be done within four months by a claimant who serves within the jurisdiction for the resulting service of his claim form to be valid. It does not provide or imply that service of a claim form served within the jurisdiction occurs upon completion of that step."
[…]
"Service
Steps required by rules of court to bring documents used in court proceedings to a person's attention."
(1) the correct approach when determining whether, for the purpose of answering the question "was the claim form served during its period of validity?" is to ascertain whether the Claimant has carried out the step required by rule 7.5 within the time provided for doing so. That would apply equally to cases where time for service has been extended by order (as here) and to cases where the basic 4 or 6 month period of validity applies; and
(2) as to the purpose of the 'deemed date' provisions in rule 6.14 those have to be given an interpretation which gives them a meaningful function and in my judgment the deeming provisions operate as a means to ensure that it is clear to the parties what date is to be used for the purpose of calculating such things as the date for service of acknowledgement of service or defence.
MASTER VICTORIA MCCLOUD
12/9/17
Note 1 Ageas was cited before me and the Defendant made the point that insofar as it deals with validity of service of the claim form it is strictly obiter. I shall not discuss it further here since in my judgment it is on all fours with T&L from which I have quoted extensively above. [Back]