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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 >> Alame & & Ors v Royal Dutch Shell Plc & Anor [2022] EWHC 989 (TCC) (29 April 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2022/989.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 989 (TCC) |
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Case No: HT-2017-000022 Case No: HT-2015-000241 Case No: HT-2016-000147 |
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Rolls Building Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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ALAME & Others Claimants: HT-2015-000430 "Bille Individuals" CHIEF IBITAMINO D MINAPAKAMA & Others Claimants: HT-2017-000022 "Bille Community" OKPABI & Others Claimants: HT-2015-000241 "Ogale Community" EJIRE AWALA & Others Claimants: HT-2016-000147 "Ogale Individuals" |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) ROYAL DUTCH SHELL PLC (2) THE SHELL PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT COMPANY OF NIGERIA LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Lord Peter Goldsmith QC, Dr Conway Blake and Tom Cornell (instructed by Debevoise & Plimpton LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 10th December 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice O'Farrell:
"This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Friday 29th April 2022 at 10:30am"
i) Alame & Others: HT-2015-000430 ("the Bille Individuals Claim");
ii) Chief Ibitamino D Minapakama & Others: HT-2017-000022 ("the Bille Community Claim");
iii) Okpabi & Others: HT-2015-000241 ("the Ogale Community Claim"); and
iv) Ejire Awala & Others: HT-2016-000147 ("the Ogale Individuals Claim").
i) whether or not a Group Litigation Order ("GLO") should be made in these proceedings; if a GLO is considered appropriate, the making of a GLO (subject to the approval of the President of the Queen's Bench Division);
ii) any necessary directions consequential on any GLO, including provision for Schedules of Information, Group Registers and Cut-off dates;
iii) the Claimants' application for transfer of these proceedings from the Technology and Construction Court ("TCC") to the Queen's Bench Division ("QBD"); and
iv) any further directions necessary to progress the proceedings.
Procedural Background
Pleadings
i) the Bille Individuals Claim (30 July 2021);
ii) the Bille Community Claim (30 July 2021);
iii) the Ogale Individuals Claim (27 August 2021); and
iv) the Ogale Community Claim (27 August 2021).
The Group Litigation Order ("GLO")
"A Group Litigation Order ('GLO') means an order made under rule 19.11 to provide for the case management of claims which give rise to common or related issues of fact or law (the "GLO issues")."
"(1) The court may make a GLO where there are or are likely to be a number of claims giving rise to the GLO issues.
(2) A GLO must –
(a) contain directions about the establishment of a register (the "group register") on which the claims managed under the GLO will be entered;
(b) specify the GLO issues which will identify the claims to be managed as a group under the GLO; and
(c) specify the court (the "management court") which will manage the claims on the group register.
(3) A GLO may –
(a) in relation to claims which raise one or more of the GLO issues –
(i) direct their transfer to the management court;
(ii) order their stay until further order; and
(iii) direct their entry on the group register;
(b) direct that from a specified date claims which raise one or more of the GLO issues should be started in the management court and entered on the group register; and
(c) give directions for publicising the GLO."
"(1) where a judgment or order is given or made in a claim on the group register in relation to one or more GLO issues –
(a) that judgment or order is binding on the parties to all other claims that are on the group register at the time the judgment is given or the order is made unless the court orders otherwise; and
(b) the court may give directions as to the extent to which that judgment or order is binding on the parties to any claim which is subsequently entered on the group register."
i) the circumstances in which, as a matter of Nigerian Law, the Defendants might be liable to pay compensation and/or damages for harm caused by oil contamination, pursuant to statute or common law remedies and whether any of those remedies are exclusive in application;
ii) the cause and effect of the oil spills relied on in each Claim;
iii) whether the Defendants owed any statutory or common law obligations, including any duty of care, to the Claimants in respect of the oil spills and any resulting harm caused;
iv) whether the Defendants were in breach of any such obligations;
v) whether any asserted claims are statute-barred in accordance with Nigerian limitation law; and
vi) injunctive relief available and/or recoverable heads of loss for any such breaches, together with the approach to quantification of such loss under Nigerian Law.
Directions consequential on GLO
i) group registers;
ii) cut-off dates;
iii) minimum requirements for entry onto the Ogale Group Register; and
iv) the content of the schedules of information.
Group Registers
Cut-off date
Standard minimum requirements
i) a Claim Form (in respect of which the issue fee has been paid) has been issued, on which the individual Claimant is named;
ii) the Claim Form on which the Claimant is named must have been served (although the requirement to serve Particulars of Claim in any separate document is dispensed with, subject to further order); and
iii) the Claimant:
a) must have resided or resides within the area known as Ogale Community as a member of that community; and
b) must claim damages against the Defendants as a result of pollution alleged to have been caused by oil from the Ogale pipelines and infrastructure.
Schedules of Information
i) Client code
ii) Name
iii) Address
iv) Date of birth
v) Type of ID
vi) ID number
vii) Gender
viii) Main source of income prior to 2012
ix) Type of fishing
x) Main sites used
xi) Before 2012 were you a full time student?
xii) Did you have a secondary source of income?
xiii) If yes, what was your secondary source of income?
xiv) Non-fishing occupation
xv) Do you own property in Bille?
xvi) How many people live in your property in Bille?
xvii) How has the oil pollution impacted life in your property?
xviii) What is your main source of income now?
xix) Do you do this full time or part time?
xx) Secondary source of income
xxi) Do you earn less money now than before 2012?
i) details of the particular oil spill in relation to which each individual Claimant seeks compensation and/or damages;
ii) where each individual Claimant says that he or she suffered damage, assuming that this location cannot be ascertained based on the individual's address;
iii) when each individual Claimant says that they were first impacted by oil from the particular oil spill;
iv) to the extent relevant to an individual Claimant's claim, the basis on which each individual asserts ownership and/or exclusive possession of the land in question; and
v) whether the individual Claimant specifically authorised Leigh Day to pursue a claim on his or her behalf.
Parties' submissions
i) the area of Ogale that has been impacted and caused them loss and damage;
ii) the area's proximity to Shell infrastructure and the area's proximity to any infrastructure owned by any other oil operator (in the case of Ogale that would be NNPC); and
iii) the nature of that harm - whether they have suffered damage to their farmland, the fish ponds, their property, their drinking water or other loss of livelihood as a result of the oil pollution.
Discussion and ruling on necessary information
"[1] Statements of case must be concise. They must plead only material facts, meaning those necessary for the purpose of formulating a cause of action or defence, and not background facts or evidence. Still less should they contain arguments, reasons or rhetoric. These basic rules were developed long ago and have stood the test of time because they serve the vital purpose of identifying the matters which each party will need to prove by evidence at trial."
"14.1 The management court may direct that the GLO claimants serve "Group Particulars of Claim" which set out the various claims of all the claimants on the Group Register at the time the particulars are filed. Such particulars of claim will usually contain –
(1) general allegations relating to all claims; and
(2) a schedule containing entries relating to each individual claim specifying which of the general allegations are relied on and any specific facts relevant to the claimant.
14.2 The directions given under paragraph 14.1 should include directions as to whether the Group Particulars should be verified by a statement or statements of truth and, if so, by whom.
14.3 The specific facts relating to each claimant on the Group Register may be obtained by the use of a questionnaire. Where this is proposed, the management court should be asked to approve the questionnaire. The management court may direct that the questionnaires completed by individual claimants take the place of the schedule referred to in paragraph 14.1(2).
14.4 The management court may also give directions about the form that particulars of claim relating to claims which are to be entered on the Group Register should take."
"This paragraph plainly envisages that particulars of claim will be served. Particulars of claim must comply with CPR Pt 16 … relevant facts must in our view be pleaded. If they are facts generally applicable to all claimants, they may be pleaded in group particulars of claim; if they are specific to a particular claimant they may be set out in a schedule …"
"In my judgment NEC Semi-Conductors is authority for the proposition that, even where multiple proceedings are managed through a GLO, the individual claim forms must still satisfy the basic pleading requirement of setting out the material facts relied upon and the causes of action to which they relate. The necessary information may be pleaded in a concise and summary form … but in the absence of this basic minimum the claim form will not fulfil its primary purpose of defining the issues and enabling the defendant to know what case it has to meet."
"[36] The logic of a global claim demands, however, that all the events which contribute to causing the global loss be events for which the defender is liable. If the causal events include events for which the defender bears no liability, the effect of upholding the global claim is to impose on the defender a liability which, in part, is not legally his. That is unjustified. A global claim, as such, must therefore fail if any material contribution to the causation of the global loss is made by a factor or factors for which the defender bears no legal liability. That point has been noted in Keating at paragraph 17-18, in Hudson at paragraph 8-210, more clearly in Emden at paragraph [231], in the American cases, and most clearly by Byrne J in Holland v Kvaerner at 85H and 86D … The point has on occasions been expressed in terms of a requirement that the pursuer should not himself have been responsible for any factor contributing materially to the global loss, but it is in my view clearly more accurate to say that there must be no material causative factor for which the defender is not liable.
[37] Advancing a claim for loss and expense in global form is therefore a risky enterprise. Failure to prove that a particular event for which the defender was liable played a part in causing the global loss will not have any adverse effect on the claim, provided the remaining events for which the defender was liable are proved to have caused the global loss. On the other hand, proof that an event played a material part in causing the global loss, combined with failure to prove that that event was one for which the defender was responsible, will undermine the logic of the global claim. Moreover, the defender may set out to prove that, in addition to the factors for which he is liable founded on by the pursuer, a material contribution to the causation of the global loss has been made by another factor or other factors for which he has no liability. If he succeeds in proving that, again the global claim will be undermined."
"For the reasons pleaded at paragraph 12(b) of the Reply, the Claimants cannot reasonably be expected to provide particulars of the dates, times or locations of the particular oil spills and leaks contributing to the contamination of the aquifer prior to provision of disclosure by the Defendants and obtaining expert evidence. Without prejudice to that position, it is likely that many of the oil spills and leaks in and around Ogale from the Ogale Pipelines and Infrastructure have collectively contributed to the contamination of the aquifer system and drinking water in Ogale."
"the collation of all the details gives a sound foundation … to the litigation as a whole and to the choice of ten test cases. It avoids the possibility of further applications and the wasted costs which that would cause and court time, and further additional delay dealing with further inquiries which might be required at a later date."
"[21] … The adjudication of the Claimants' various claims raises the issues that it raises, not the issues that the Claimants would like to say that it raises, or only the issues that they would like to have adjudicated. I must form a view of the extent to which any given issue will arise. It does not cease to arise merely because the Claimants would like to run the case without it. True it is that the manner in which the Claimants' Particulars of Claim are formulated relies on the sort of common issues … that I have referred to above, and that they do not go into the circumstances of individual transactions. However, that does not mean that the individual circumstances will not be an issue in these claims. It can be safely predicted, on the basis of the evidence and submissions before me, that if the claims were pleaded out the banks' Defences would take the point that the actual circumstances rendered the relevant terms, or the relationship, fair because, for example, the claimant in question had sufficient understanding, and the transaction made personal sense for that individual. That those circumstances are capable of being relevant is, in my view, quite plain from the wording of the legislation, whose pertinent words I have emphasised above. At the end of the day that proposition was not disputed by counsel for the claimants.
[22] In those circumstances it seems to me to be quite wrong to allow the GLO issues to be phrased in such a way as involve a shutting out of individual circumstances from the scope of the litigation. It is not an accurate way of describing the litigation and amounts to a form of pre-judgment of some issues."
i) In both the Bille Individuals Claim and the Ogale Individuals Claim, the Claimants must provide details of the particular oil spill, or spills, in relation to which each individual claimant seeks compensation and/or damages. This does not have to depend solely on the recollection of individuals. Contemporaneous records, including photographs and reports, may assist in identifying the relevant events. If the Claimants are unable to provide such details, they must confirm the nature of the case they will rely on at trial, i.e. a global claim.
ii) In both the Bille Individuals Claim and the Ogale Individuals Claim, the Claimants must provide details as to where each individual Claimant says that he or she suffered damage, if not confined to the individuals' address set out in the questionnaire. This should be relatively straightforward to ascertain as it must be the basis on which an individual has agreed to participate in these proceedings.
iii) In both the Bille Individuals Claim and the Ogale Individuals Claim, the Claimants must provide details as to when each individual Claimant claims that they were first impacted by oil from the particular oil spill. Contrary to the Claimants' submission, this is not simply relevant to the pleaded defence of limitation made in the Ogale Individuals Claim. The date on which it is claimed that the adverse impact of oil contamination was first suffered is also relevant to the causal link between a particular oil spill and actionable damage. The Claimants' case is that the Defendants are responsible for all such oil spills, by failing to prevent, mitigate or remediate the same, but the Defendants' case is that they have remedied any spills for which they were responsible and they have no liability for those caused by others. If the Claimants are unable to provide such details, they must confirm the nature of the case they will rely on at trial, i.e. a global claim.
iv) In both the Bille Individuals Claim and the Ogale Individuals Claim, the Claimants must provide, to the extent relevant to an individual's claim, the basis on which each individual asserts ownership and/or exclusive possession of the land in question. This will enable the parties to categorise the claimants by land interests so that a representative pool can be identified from which the lead claimants can be selected. The court understands that the concepts of property rights under Nigerian Law may differ from those in this jurisdiction. Therefore, where an individual simply relies on occupation or use of the land, or other interest, that can be stated.
v) In the Ogale Individuals Claim, the Claimants must confirm that the individual Claimant specifically authorised Leigh Day to pursue a claim on his or her behalf. It should be relatively straightforward for this to be added as a further item on the questionnaires. It is not necessary for the Bille Individuals Claim because Leigh Day has already collated information in the schedules for the purpose of pursuing those individual claims and it must be presumed that authority was given from provision of the information.
Statement of Truth
Other matters