H134
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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Irish Bank Resolution Corporation Ltd & ors -v- Quinn & ors [2015] IEHC 134 (13 February 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2015/H134.html Cite as: [2015] IEHC 134 |
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Judgment
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Neutral Citation: [2015] IEHC 134 THE HIGH COURT [2011 No. 5843 P.]
[2012 No. 120 COM] BETWEEN IRISH BANK RESOLUTION CORPORATION LIMITED (IN SPECIAL LIQUIDATION) QUINN INVESTMENTS SWEDEN AB AND LEIF BAECKLUND PLAINTIFFS AND
SEÁN QUINN, CIARA QUINN, COLETTE QUINN, SEÁN QUINN JR., BRENDA QUINN, AOIFE QUINN, STEPHEN KELLY, PETER DARRAGH QUINN, NIALL MCPARTLAND, INDIAN TRUST AB, FORFAR OVERSEAS SA, LOCKERBIE INVESTMENTS SA, CLONMORE INVESTMENTS SA, MARFINE INVESTMENTS LIMITED, BLANDUN ENTERPRISES LIMITED, MECON FZE, CJSC, VNESHKONSALT, OOO STROITELNYE TEKHNOLOGII, OOO RLC-DEVELOPMENT, KAREN WOODS, SENAT FZC, SENAT LEGAL CONSULTANCY FZ-LLC AND MICHAEL WAECHTER DEFENDANTS JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Brian J. McGovern delivered on the 13th day of February, 2015 1. By notice of motion dated 15th July, 2014, the personal defendants seek leave to issue a motion pursuant to O. 40, r. 1 of the Rules of the Superior Courts or, alternatively, pursuant to the inherent jurisdiction of the courts requiring the attendance of Mr. Kieran Wallace, for cross examination in respect of an affidavit sworn by him on 29th May, 2014. The application is grounded on the affidavit of Mr. Niall McPartland sworn on 14th July, 2014. 2. The affidavit sworn by Mr. Wallace was used in an ex parte application brought before Kelly J. on 30th May, 2014. In para. 2 of his affidavit, Mr. Wallace stated:-
4. The applicants in the motion complain that the information contained in the affidavit of Mr. Wallace cast them in a bad light, not only before the court, but also before the public in general and gives a litigation advantage to the plaintiffs over the personal defendants. The application was made on a Friday and the applicants claim that over the following weekend there was extensive, hostile media coverage of them in the light of the information put before the court by Mr. Wallace. They suggest that someone connected with the plaintiffs leaked to the media the fact that an ex parte application would be made thus ensuring that there were journalists in court, notwithstanding the fact the applicants were not put on notice of the application and were unaware of it. The applicants also complain that while the court made no findings as a result of the ex parte application, it did make costs of the application costs in the cause and that this was a ruling made without them being heard or present in court and they are affected by it. 5. The evidence as to how journalists came to be in court when the ex parte application was made is inconclusive. The ex parte application was made on a Friday which is the day on which a call over of the cases for the following week takes place and it is normal for applications regarding matters in the list to be made. It is not unusual for journalists to be present in the court on a Friday. If there were journalists present then the information put before Kelly J. on 30th May, 2014, would have been a matter of public interest and one would expect that it would be reported in the media. Whether the media were tipped off about the application is hard to say. It would be undesirable if the media were alerted to a court application made ex parte if the dominant purpose was to obtain a litigious advantage. But that could not arise here. I am satisfied that the application made to the court was merely for the purpose of updating the court at the earliest opportunity on information which had come to light as result of proceedings in the US courts and the Courts of England and Wales. While it is true that in his affidavit Mr. Wallace stated that some of the facts canvassed tended to support allegations of conspiracy to put assets beyond the reach of the plaintiffs, there were no new allegations made. Furthermore, no order was sought from the court other than asking that costs of the application be costs in the cause. 6. It would be normal for a receiver or liquidator to apply for costs of applications brought before the court in the course of a receivership or liquidation and - save for an application improperly made - it is hard to conceive of any circumstances where an application that the costs of such an ex parte application should be made costs in the cause would not be approved by the court. 7. The applicants assert that their constitutional rights as articulated in In Re Haughey [1971] I.R. 217, and Maguire v. Ardagh [2002] 1 I.R. 387, would be breached if they were not entitled to cross examine Mr. Wallace on the contents of his affidavit. Such an argument is, in my view, misconceived. The circumstances in both those cases were entirely different. Each of those cases involved the rights of a citizen to cross examine a witness giving evidence against them. In Re Haughey, the witness had made accusations against Mr. Haughey at a public hearing of an Oireachtas committee, namely, the Committee of Public Accounts. In Maguire v. Ardagh, witnesses were called to give evidence against the applicant before an Oireachtas subcommittee. There is no equivalence between the facts of those cases and the circumstances giving rise to this application. 8. In his affidavit grounding this application, Mr. McPartland states that the applicants seek the cross examination of Mr. Wallace on foot of his affidavit sworn on 29th May, 2014:-
10. The test for cross examination of a witness on an affidavit is set out in Director of Corporate Enforcement v. Seymour [2006] IEHC 369. In that case, O’Donovan J. stated at p. 5:-
12. I am satisfied that there are no grounds for giving the applicants leave to cross examine Mr. Wallace on his affidavit and I refuse the applicants’ motion brought for that purpose. |