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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Heron Bros Ltd v Central Bedfordshire Council [2015] EWHC 604 (TCC) (20 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2015/604.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 604 (TCC), [2015] WLR(D) 137, [2015] PTSR 1146 |
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(formerly HT-14-393) |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Heron Bros Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Central Bedfordshire Council |
Defendant |
____________________
Jason Coppel Esq, QC (instructed by Geldards LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 27th February 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Edwards-Stuart:
Introduction
The background
Date | Event |
31 October 2014 | Claimant's agent sends to the Defendant unsealed copies of the claim form and Particulars of Claim by recorded delivery. Claimant's agent sends three copies of the claim form and Particulars of Claim to the Court for sealing. |
3 November 2014 | Claimant's agent sends the Defendant by e-mail a copy of its letter of 31 October 2014, together with the enclosures. The Court seals and issues the claim form. |
10 November 2014 | The Court posts the issued claim form and Particulars of Claim to the Claimant for service. |
14 November 2014 | The Claimant says that it received the Claim Form from the Court (Connelly, para 10). |
18 November 2014 | This is the date on which the claim form and Particulars of Claim were deemed to be served, being the second business day after they were posted. |
"Please find enclosed 3 copies of the Claim form and Particulars of Claim, together with the appropriate fee. We would be grateful if this could be sealed and returned to us for service upon the Defendant at your earliest convenience."
"We represent Heron Bros Ltd of 2 St Patrick's Street, Draperstown, Northern Ireland, BT45 7AL in respect of a dispute with Central Bedfordshire Council, relating to the procurement process for a main contractor to construct the new Flitwick Leisure Centre.
As you are aware from our client's previous correspondence, they have grave misgivings over how the procurement process has been conducted and fear that they have suffered prejudice as a result. In view of the limited timeframe for challenging a procurement process we have issued the enclosed Claim Form, Particulars of Claim and relevant fee to the High Court.
Naturally we will serve the sealed copies of forms upon you at our first available opportunity. However, we enclose copies of these forms by way of early warning and notification."
The Regulations
"(1) Where proceedings are started, the economic operator must serve the claim form on the contracting authority within 7 days after the date of issue.
...
(5) In this regulation, 'serve' means serve in accordance with rules of court, and for the purposes of this regulation a claim form is deemed to be served on the day on which it is deemed by rules of court to be served."
The submissions of the parties
"On the face of it, at any rate, there is a clear and unqualified statutory time limit, namely 7 days, and there would therefore seem to be no basis upon which it could be extended. In that connection, viewed from the English and Welsh perspective, I would refer to the CPR, which contain provisions whereby the court can extend time for the taking of any step, under CPR 3.1(2)(a), can make an order remedying any error of procedure, under CPR 3.10, or can make an order dispensing with service of documents, under CPR 6.9. However, these powers cannot be invoked to extend a statutory time limit or to avoid service required by statute, unless of course, the statute so provides. Apart from being correct as a matter of principle, this conclusion follows from CPR 3.2(a) which refers to time limits in 'any rule, practice direction or court order', and from CPR 6.1(a) which states that the rules in CPR 6 apply, 'except where any other enactment ... makes a different provision'."
i) The fact that the Defendant had received a draft claim form during the relevant period cannot be a good reason for extending time. The Defendant would be prejudiced by having to face a claim which otherwise would be out of time.ii) Although there would appear to have been a delay in the TCC Registry in sending out the issued claim form, the Claimant's representative, with offices not far from the court, took an extraordinary risk in posting the draft claim form for issue by the court without any indication in the covering letter that service of the issued claim form would have to be undertaken with extreme urgency. It is said that a prudent representative would have taken the claim form to court by hand for issue.
iii) Further, it would appear that the Claimant itself may have taken an unnecessary risk in instructing consultants to conduct the litigation who, it appears, may not be authorised to conduct litigation in this jurisdiction.
i) The court's discretion to extend the time for service which it should exercise in these wholly exceptional circumstances.ii) Alternatively, if and in so far as the Regulations do not make provision for such discretion, they are not compliant with the principles of equivalence and/or effectiveness and must accordingly be disapplied and/or read in accordance with those principles.
The effect of sending the unsealed claim form to the Defendant
"Notice of an appeal under this section must be given in accordance with the rules of court before the end of the permitted period, which is seven days starting with the day on which the order is made."
"Nothing in the rules precludes service on the CPS or on the Respondent of an Appellant's Notice which has not been issued (or stamped as received) by the Administrative Court Office as Mr. Justice Collins pointed out in dialogue with counsel during a hearing on 6 April 2009 conducted by video link when, it appears to me, at least initially the CPS thought that it could waive service. Alerted by the court, counsel preserved the jurisdiction point and Mr. Justice Collins granted legal assistance so that it could be argued or at least ventilated."
"Lord Neuberger made it clear in paragraphs 75 and 82 of his opinion (see above) that the reference to the rules of court in section 26(4) 'govern the manner, not the time of service'. Whereas the time for both filing and serving the notice of appeal is fixed by the Act and may not be extended by the court (nor may the court dispense with filing or service of the notice of appeal, see paragraph 80 of Lord Neuberger's opinion), the Act leaves the manner by which both filing and service of a notice of appeal are to be effected to the rules of court, ie the CPR supplemented by the relevant practice directions. Where procedural requirements governed by the CPR have not been complied with, the court has power to remedy the procedural error (CPR 3.10) and will do so if it is necessary in order to give effect to the overriding objective (CPR 1.2). This must apply with particular force to the very detailed procedural requirements which are not prescribed by the rules themselves, but which are contained within supplementary practice directions."
"I have said that no decision on the point is necessary. I simply observe that I am not convinced on the basis of what I have seen that service would be defective if an unsealed copy of the notice were served within the seven-day period, provided of course that it were in identical terms to the notice as filed. Even if service of an unsealed copy is technically defective, it may well be that the remedial power in CPR rule 3.10 could be invoked to cure the defect without offending the strict requirements of the 2003 Act."
"The statute requires notice of an appeal to be given in accordance with the rules of court, so any failure to comply with the rules of court requires the appellant to seek relief from the court to cure the irregularity. But this does not answer the question what constitutes giving 'notice of an appeal' to the respondents which, if not in accordance with the rules, nonetheless satisfies the statutory requirement and is capable of being cured. In my view, a generous view can and should be taken of this, bearing in mind the shortness of the permitted period and the fact that what really matters is that an appeal should have been filed and all respondents should be on notice of this, sufficient to warn them that they should not proceed with extradition pending an appeal. This should not however be taken as a licence to appellants to give informal notices of appeal. Any potential appellant serving anything other than a complete copy of the sealed Form N161 will need to seek and will depend upon obtaining the court's permission to cure the position under the rules."
The time period for service of the claim form and the claim to extend time
"In this regulation, 'serve' means serve in accordance with rules of court, and for the purposes of this regulation a claim form is deemed to be served on the day on which it is deemed by rules of court to be served."
"Where proceedings are to be started, the economic operator must, after filing the claim form, serve it on the contracting authority."
It was then amended by The Public Procurement (Miscellaneous Amendments) Regulations 2011 ("the 2011 Regulations") so as to read:
"Where proceedings are started, the economic operator must serve the claim form on the contracting authority within 7 days after the date of issue."
"In my view, that general assumption is wrong. Section 26(4) requires the appellant's notice to be issued and served within seven days, and I can see no warrant for the CPR being invoked to cut down that period. If a statute permits something to be done within a specific period, it is hard to see how that period can be cut down by subordinate legislation, as a matter of principle. In relation to the first two points of principle raised by these appeals, it is part of the prosecutor's case, indeed it is part of my reasoning, that the reference to rules of court in the section govern the manner, not the time, of service. In the circumstances, it is particularly hard to see how invocation of provisions of the CPR can be justified in order to curtail that period. The point is reinforced by practical considerations: the seven-day period laid down by section 26(4) is short, and it does not seem very fair to cut it down, even if only by a few hours. Although the 14 days permitted by section 103(9) is somewhat longer, the same reasoning applies.
"A discretion must only arise 'in exceptional circumstances' and where the appellant 'personally has done all he can to bring [the appeal] timeously'."
Curing the irregularity
The principles of equivalence and effectiveness
"... according to established case law, in the absence of Community rules governing the matter it is for the domestic legal system of each Member State to designate the courts and tribunals having jurisdiction and to lay down the detailed procedural rules governing actions for safeguarding rights which individuals derive from Community law, provided, however, that such rules are not less favourable than those governing similar domestic actions (the principle of equivalence) and do not render virtually impossible or excessively difficult the exercise of rights conferred by Community law (the principle of effectiveness)."
"In order to determine whether the principle of equivalence has been complied with in the present case the national court - which alone has direct knowledge of the procedural rules governing actions in the field of employment law - must consider both the purpose and the essential characteristics of allegedly similar domestic actions.
Furthermore, whenever it falls to be determined whether a procedural rule of national law is less favourable than those governing similar domestic actions, the national court must take into account the role played by that provision in the procedure as a whole, as well as the operation and any special features of that procedure before the different national courts."
Conclusions
Note 1 Although Mr Coppel referred me to the decision in Cranfield both during his oral submissions and in a post-hearing note, I did not mention it in the draft of this judgment that was prepared for handing down. This was an oversight because when preparing this judgment I did in fact consider that decision and, in particular, paragraph 57 on which Mr Coppel specifically relied. I reached the conclusion then that I have now set out in paragraphs 30–33 of this judgment. In the circumstances, I consider that it is appropriate that I should amend the judgment to reflect the conclusion that I had in fact reached on this point, rather than leave the omission as a potential ground of appeal. [Back] Note 2 I discuss this principle in more detail in the section which deals with the principles of equivalence and effectiveness. [Back]