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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 >> MBR Acres Ltd & Ors v (Free the MBR Beagles & Ors [2022] EWHC 1677 (QB) (31 March 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2022/1677.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1677 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) MBR ACRES LIMITED (2) DEMETRIS MARKOU (for and on behalf of the officers and employees of MBR Acres Limited, and the officers and employees of third party suppliers and service providers to MBR Acres Limited pursuant to CPR 19.6) (3) B & K UNIVERSAL LIMITED (4) SUSAN PRESSICK (for and on behalf of the officers and employees of B & K Universal Limited, and the officers and employees of third party suppliers and service providers to B & K Universal Limited pursuant to CPR 19.6) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) FREE THE MBR BEAGLES (formerly Stop Animal Cruelty Huntingdon) (an unincorporated association by its representative Mel Broughton on behalf of the members of Free the MBR Beagles who are protesting within the area marked in blue on the Plan attached at Annex 1 of the Claim Form and/or engaging in unlawful activities against the Claimants and/or trespassing on the First Claimant's Land at MBR Acres Limited, Wyton, Huntingdon PE28 2DT and/or posting on social media images and details of the officers and employees of MBR Acres Limited, and the officers and employees of third party suppliers and service providers to MBR Acres Limited) (2) CAMP BEAGLE (an unincorporated association by its representative Bethany Mayflower on behalf of the members of Camp Beagle who are protesting within the area marked in blue on the Plan attached at Annex 1 of the Claim Form and/or engaging in unlawful activities against the Claimants and/or trespassing on the First Claimant's Land at MBR Acres Limited, Wyton, Huntingdon PE28 2DT and/or posting on social media images and details of the officers and employees of MBR Acres Limited, and the officers and employees of third party suppliers and service providers to MBR Acres Limited) (3) MEL BROUGHTON (4) RONAN FALSEY (5) BETHANY MAYFLOWER (also known as Bethany May and/or Alexandra Taylor) (6) SCOTT PATERSON (7) HELEN DURANT (8) BERNADETTE GREEN (9) SAM MORLEY (10) PERSON(S) UNKNOWN (who are protesting within the area marked in blue on the Plan attached at Annex 1 of the Claim Form and/or engaging in unlawful activities against the Claimants and/or trespassing on the First Claimant's Land at MBR Acres Limited, Wyton, Huntingdon PE28 2DT and/or posting on social media images and details of the officers and employees of MBR Acres Limited, and the officers and employees of third party suppliers and service providers to MBR Acres Limited) (11) JOHN CURTIN (12) MICHAEL MAHER (also known as John Thibeault) (13) SAMMI LAIDLAW (14) PAULINE HODSON (15) PERSON(S) UNKNOWN (who are entering or remaining without the consent of the First Claimant on the land and in buildings outlined in red on the plan at Annex 1 of the Amended Claim Form, that land known as MBR Acres Limited, Wyton, Huntingdon PE28 2DT) (16) PERSON(S) UNKNOWN (who are interfering with the rights of way enjoyed by the First Claimant over the access road on the land shown in purple at Annex 3 of the Amended Claim Form and enjoyed by the Second Claimant as an implied or express licensee of the First Claimant) (17) PERSON(S) UNKNOWN (who are obstructing vehicles of the Second Claimant entering or exiting the access road shown in purple Annex 3 of the Amended Claim Form and/or entering the First Claimant's land at MBR Acres Limited, Wyton, Huntingdon PE28 2DT) (18) LOU MARLEY (also known as Louise Yvonne Firth) (19) LUCY WINDLER (also known as Lucy Lukins) (20) LISA JAFFRAY (21) JOANNE SHAW (22) AMANDA JAMES 3 (23) VICTORIA ASPLIN (24) AMANDEEP SINGH (25) PERSON UNKNOWN 70 (26) PERSON UNKNOWN 74 (27) IAN GRACE (28) PERSON(S) UNKNOWN (who are, without the consent of the First Claimant, entering or remaining on land and in buildings outlined in red on the plans at Annex 1 to the Amended Claim Form, those being land and buildings owned by the First Claimant, at MBR Acres Limited, Wyton, Huntingdon PE28 2DT) (29) PERSON(S) UNKNOWN (who are interfering, without lawful excuse, with the First Claimant's staff and Second Claimants' right to pass and repass with or without vehicles, materials and equipment along the Highway known as the B1090) (30) PERSON(S) UNKNOWN (who are obstructing vehicles exiting the First Claimant's land at MBR Acres Limited, Wyton, Huntingdon PE28 2DT and accessing the Highway known as the B1090) (31) PERSON(S) UNKNOWN (who are protesting outside the premises of the First Claimant and/or against the First Claimant's lawful business activities and pursuing a course of conduct causing alarm and/or distress to the Second Claimant and/or the staff of the First Claimant for the purpose of convincing the Second Claimant and/or the staff of the First Claimant not to: (a) work for the First Claimant; and/or (b) provide services to the First Claimant; and/or (c) supply goods to the First Claimant; and/or (d) to stop the First Claimants' lawful business activities at MBR Acres Limited, Wyton, Huntingdon PE28 2DT) (32) PERSON(S) UNKNOWN (who are photographing and/or videoing/recording the First Claimant's staff and members of the Second Claimant and/or their vehicles and vehicle registration numbers as they enter and exit and/or work on the First Claimant's land outlined in red at Annex 1 to the Amended Claim Form for the purpose of causing alarm and/or distress by threatening to use and/or in fact using the images and/or recordings to identify members of the Second Claimant, follow the Second Claimant or ascertain the home addresses of the Second Claimant for the purpose of convincing the Second Claimant not to: (a) work for the First Claimant; and/or (b) not to provide services to the First Claimant; and/or (c) not to supply goods to the First Claimant) (33) PERSON(S) UNKNOWN (who are, without the consent of the First Claimant, trespassing on the First Claimant's land by flying drones over the First Claimant's land and buildings outlined in red on the plans at Annex 1 to the Amended Claim Form, that being land and buildings owned by MBR Acres Limited, Wyton, Huntingdon PE28 2DT) 4 (34) PERSON(S) UNKNOWN (who are combining together and/or with other identified Defendants to commit the unlawful acts as specified in paragraphs 496 to 514 of the Amended Particulars of Claim) |
Defendants |
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2nd Floor, Quality House, 6-9 Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP.
Telephone No: 020 7067 2900. DX 410 LDE
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.martenwalshcherer.com
James Nieto (instructed by Cohen Cramer Ltd) for the Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, Ninth, Thirteenth and Fourteenth Defendants
Adam Tear (of Scott-Moncrieff & Associates Ltd) for the Seventh & Twenty-second Defendants
The Eleventh, Twelfth, Nineteenth, Twenty-first & Twenty-fourth Defendants appeared In Person
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE NICKLIN :
i) harassment contrary to ss.1 and 1 (1)(a) Protection from Harassment Act;
ii) trespass; and
iii) alleged breaches of ss.145-146 Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005.
At that stage the particulars did not include any claim for a conspiracy.
"Finally, there is a persons unknown claim covering the claim against persons unknown who were conspiring to injure the Claimants by unlawful means, Defendant 34. This is an important Defendant to join to the Claimants' conspiracy claim which asserts a claim for an injunction to restrain breaches under sections 145 and 146 of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005 as well as seeking to restrain other unlawful means. These sections were enacted to protect businesses like MBR and offer important protection. Accordingly, as an animal research organisation we should not be denied the opportunity to seek this relief.
Further, it is necessary, if the court is going to consider other important claims, to consider the unlawful means conspiracy claim as it is plain that the protestors are organised, they have conspired to harm our business and they have used unlawful means as set out in the draft amended particulars of claim. Further, it is clear from the draft amended particulars of claim that this includes allegations that the named Defendants conspired with persons unknown.
At the hearing on 4th October 2001, the court indicated that it wanted a completely new particulars of claim and there is no reason why the Claimants should not be allowed to rely on a perfectly appropriate unlawful means conspiracy claim and join persons unknown conspiring with the named Defendants to use unlawful means to harm the Claimants; indeed the claim brings into consideration offences which have been committed by the protestors which could not otherwise be considered by the court".
The Pleaded Claim for Conspiracy
"494. Further, on or before 25th June 2021 the third, fifth, seven, eighth, eleven, twelfth, 13th, 14th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 21st, 22nd, 23rd, 24th, 25th, 26th, 27th and/or 34th Defendants respectively (or any two or more together) wrongfully and with intent to injure the first claimant by unlawful means, conspired and combined to:
494.1 Harm the first claimant's business with the aim of shutting down the first claimant, as is evident from the matters particularised above.
494.2 Obtain the release of the first claimant's beagles, as evident from the matters particularised above.
494.3 To bring an end to animal testing for medical and veterinary research in the United Kingdom as particularised above".
"495. Pursuant to and in furtherance of the conspiracy pleaded in paragraph 494 above, the first claimant relies upon the unlawful acts and means particularised in paragraphs 496 to 514 below by which the first claimant was injured. Each of the acts particularised below in paragraphs 496 to 514 also included Defendant 34, persons unknown who are combining together and/or with other identified Defendants to commit the unlawful acts specified in paragraph 496 to 514 of the amended particulars of claim".
"(1) A person commits an offence who, with a view to compelling another person to abstain from doing or to do any act which that person has a legal right to do or abstain from doing, wrongfully and without legal authority—
(a) uses violence to or intimidates that person or his spouse or civil partner or children, or injures his property,
(b) persistently follows that person about from place to place,
(c) hides any tools, clothes or other property owned or used by that person, or deprives him of or hinders him in the use thereof,
(d) watches or besets the house or other place where that person resides, works, carries on business or happens to be, or the approach to any such house or place, or
(e) follows that person with two or more other persons in a disorderly manner in or through any street or road.
(2) A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable on summary conviction to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months or a fine not exceeding level 5 on the standard scale, or both…"
Permission to Amend: the Relevant Principles
[40] There was no dispute about the test to be applied in the circumstances of this case… [It] is important to bear in mind that the overriding objective applies and the question of whether permission to amend should be given must be considered in the light of the need to conduct litigation fairly and justly and at proportionate cost.
[41] For the amendments to be allowed the Appellants need to show that they have a real as opposed to fanciful prospect of success which is one that is more than merely arguable and carries some degree of conviction: ED&F Man Liquid Products Ltd -v- Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472. A claim does not have such a prospect where (a) it is possible to say with confidence that the factual basis for the claim is fanciful because it is entirely without substance; (b) the claimant does not have material to support at least a prima facie case that the allegations are correct; and/or (c) the claim has pleaded insufficient facts in support of their case to entitle the Court to draw the necessary inferences: Three Rivers District Council -v- Bank of England (No.3) [2003] 2 AC 1.
[42] The court is entitled to reject a version of the facts which is implausible, self-contradictory or not supported by the contemporaneous documents and it is appropriate for the court to consider whether the proposed pleading is coherent and contains the properly particularised elements of the cause of action relied upon… (emphasis added)
"A court is entitled to make a proportionality judgment in relation to its likely effect on the case in the light of the resources and effort which would have to be put into running or meeting and deciding it".
The Judge was referring to the principle identified by the Court of Appeal in Jameel -v- Dow Jones [2005] QB 946 in which Lord Phillips MR, memorably noted [54]:
"It is no longer the role of the court simply to provide a level playing field and to referee whatever the game the parties choose to play upon it. The court is concerned to ensure that judicial and court resources are appropriately and proportionately used in accordance with the requirements of justice".
[12] Conspiracy to injure must be pleaded to a high standard, particularly where the allegations include dishonesty:
i) Allegations of conspiracy to injure "must be clearly pleaded and clearly proved by convincing evidence" (Jarman & Platt Ltd -v- I Barget Ltd [1977] FSR 260, 267).
ii) The more serious the allegations made, the more important it is for the case to be set out clearly and with adequate particularity: Secretary of State for Trade and Industry -v- Swan [2003] EWHC 1780 (Ch) [22]-[24]; CPR PD 16 §8.2 in respect of the obligations on a party pleading dishonesty; Mullarkey -v- Broad [2007] EWHC 3400 (Ch); [2008] 1 BCLC 638 [40]-[47] on the burden and standard of proof for such claims and reiterating the well-established principle that an allegation of dishonesty must be pleaded clearly and with particularity (citing Belmont Finance Corp -v- Williams Furniture [1979] Ch 250, 268).
iii) Unlawful means conspiracy is a grave allegation, which ought not to be lightly made, and like fraud must be clearly pleaded and requires a high standard of proof: CEF Holdings -v- Mundey [2012] EWHC 1534 (QB); [2012] IRLR 912 [74].
iv) Where a conspiracy claim alleges dishonesty, then "all the strictures that apply to pleading fraud" are directly engaged, i.e. it is necessary to plead all the specific facts and circumstances supporting the inference of dishonesty by the defendants: ED&F Man Sugar -v- T&L Sugars [2016] EWHC 272 (Comm).
v) As to the substantive elements of the tort:
"To establish liability for assisting another person in the commission of a tort [common design], it is necessary to show that the defendant (i) acted in a way which furthered the commission of the tort by the other person and (ii) did so in pursuance of a common design to do, or secure the doing of, the acts which constituted the tort…
The elements of this tort [conspiracy] are a combination or agreement between the defendant and another person pursuant to which unlawful action is taken which causes loss or damage to the claimant and is intended or expected by the defendant to do so (whether or not this was the defendant's predominant purpose)." (Marathon Asset Management LLP -v- Seddon [2017] IRLR 503 [132] and [135]).
[25] Where, as here, a Claimant wishes to amend to plead fraud and the application is opposed, it is material to bear in mind the approach that the Court routinely takes to proving fraud in civil litigation. A sufficient summary for present purposes is provided by Fiona Trust & Holding Corp v Privalov [2010] EWHC 3199 (Comm) [1438]-[1439] per Andrew Smith J:
'It is well established that "cogent evidence is required to justify a finding of fraud or other discreditable conduct": per Moore-Bick LJ in Jafari-Fini -v- Skillglass Ltd [2007] EWCA Civ 261 [73]. This principle reflects the court's conventional perception that it is generally not likely that people will engage in such conduct: "where a claimant seeks to prove a case of dishonesty, its inherent improbability means that, even on the civil burden of proof, the evidence needed to prove it must be all the stronger", per Rix LJ in Markel -v- Higgins [2009] EWCA 790 [50]. The question remains one of the balance of probability, although typically, as Ungoed-Thomas J put it in In re Dellow's Will Trusts [1964] 1 WLR 415, 455 (cited by Lord Nicholls in In re H [1996] AC 563, 586H), "The more serious the allegation the more cogent the evidence required to overcome the unlikelihood of what is alleged and thus to prove it"…
…Thus in the Jafari-Fini [49], Carnwath LJ recognised an obvious qualification to the application of the principle, and said, "Unless it is dealing with known fraudsters, the court should start from a strong presumption that the innocent explanation is more likely to be correct."'
[26] This summary is consistent with many other decisions of high authority which establish that pleadings of fraud should be subjected to close scrutiny and that it is not possible to infer dishonesty from facts that are equally consistent with honesty: see, for example, Mukhtar -v- Saleem [2018] EWHC 1729 (QB); Elite Property Holdings Ltd -v- Barclays Bank [2017] EWHC 2030 (QB); Three Rivers DC -v- The Governor and Company of Barclays of England (No.3) [2003] 2 AC 1 [186] per Lord Millett...
[27] One of the features of claims involving fraud or deceit is the prospect that the Defendant will, if the underlying allegation is true, have tried to shroud his conduct in secrecy. This has routinely been addressed in cases involving allegations that a defendant has engaged in anti-competitive arrangements. In such cases, the Court adopts what is called a generous approach to pleadings. The approach was summarised by Flaux J in Bord Na Mona Horticultural Ltd & Anr -v- British Polythene Industries Plc [2012] EWHC 3346 (Comm) [29]ff. Flaux J set out the principles in play as described by Sales J in Nokia Corporation -v- AU Optronics Corporation [2012] EWHC 731 (Ch) [62]-[67], which included the existence of a tension between (a) the impulse to ensure that claims are fully and clearly pleaded, and (b) the impulse to ensure that justice is done and a claimant is not prevented by overly strict and demanding rules of pleading from introducing a claim which may prove to be properly made out at trial but may be shut out by the law of limitation if the claimant is to be forced to wait until he has full particulars before launching a claim. Sales J indicated that this tension was to be resolved by "allowing a measure of generosity in favour of a claimant."
Unlawful Means Conspiracy
"Where damage is caused as a result of torts committed by two or more tortfeasors, the tortfeasors may be: (1) joint tortfeasors, for example where D1 and D2 are each responsible for a joint tortious venture which injures C; (2) several tortfeasors causing the same damage; or (3) several tortfeasors causing different damage. If one of a number of joint tortfeasors or several tortfeasors causing the same damage is sued alone, he is liable for the whole damage though he did but a small part of it. In the case of several tortfeasors causing different damage, on the other hand, each is liable only for the damage which he has caused".
i) concerted actions between two or more persons (the "combination");
ii) use of unlawful means;
iii) knowledge of the unlawfulness;
iv) intention to injure the claimant, whether or not it is the predominant purpose of the defendant to do so;
v) overt act in pursuance of the agreement or undertaking;
vi) loss or damage as a result.
Some controversy has attended the third of those, knowledge of unlawfulness, and there remain arguments as to how that particular element is to be interpreted in the context of the tort, but that does not matter for today's purposes.
"The tort consists not of agreement but of concerted action taken pursuant to agreement".
[111] A further feature of the tort of conspiracy, which is also found in criminal conspiracies, is that, as the judge pointed out at page 124, it is not necessary to show that there is anything in the nature of an express agreement, whether formal or informal. It is sufficient if two or more persons combine with a common intention, or, in other words, that they deliberately combine, albeit tacitly, to achieve a common end. Although civil and criminal conspiracies have important differences, we agree with the judge that the following passage from the judgment of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division delivered by O'Connor LJ in R -v- Siracusa (1990) 90 Cr. App. R. 340, 349 is of assistance in this context:
"Secondly, the origins of all conspiracies are concealed and it is usually quite impossible to establish when or where the initial agreement was made or when or where other conspirators were recruited. The very existence of the agreement can only be inferred from overt acts. Participation in a conspiracy is infinitely variable: it can be active or passive. If the majority shareholder and director of a company consents to the company being used for drug smuggling carried out in the company's name by a fellow director and minority shareholder, he is guilty of conspiracy. Consent, that is agreement or adherence to the agreement, can be inferred if it is proved that he knew what was going on and the intention to participate in the furtherance of the criminal purpose is also established by his failure to stop the unlawful activity."
Thus it is not necessary for the conspirators all to join the conspiracy at the same time, but we agree with the judge that the parties to it must be sufficiently aware of the surrounding circumstances and share the same object for it properly to be said that they were acting in concert at the time of the acts complained of. In a criminal case juries are often asked to decide whether the alleged conspirators were 'in it together'. That may be a helpful question to ask, but we agree with Mr Brodie that it should not be used as a method of avoiding detailed consideration of the acts which are said to have been done in pursuance of the conspiracy.
[112] In most cases it will be necessary to scrutinise the acts relied upon in order to see what inferences can be drawn as to the existence or otherwise of the alleged conspiracy or combination. It will be the rare case in which there will be evidence of the agreement itself. Curiously this is such a case, although it appears to us that in crucial respects it is also necessary to draw inferences as to the extent of the agreement from what happened after it. Thus the essential nature of the agreement can be seen in part from the evidence of Mr Al Bader and Captain Stafford, although, especially in the case of Captain Stafford, the extent of the agreement will depend upon inferences to be drawn both from the surrounding circumstances and subsequent events.
Decision
MR. JUSTICE NICKLIN: