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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> HM Secretary of State for Business Enterprise & Regulatory Reform, Re An Order To Wind Up UK Bankruptcy Ltd [2010] ScotCS CSIH_80 (21 September 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2010/2010CSIH80.html Cite as: 2010 SLT 1242, 2010 SCLR 801, 2010 GWD 33-686, [2010] ScotCS CSIH_80, [2010] CSIH 80 |
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SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lord Justice ClerkLord ClarkeLord Marnoch
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[2010] CSIH 80P1975/08 OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE CLERK
IN THE PETITION OF
HER MAJESTY'S SECRETARY OF STATE FOR BUSINESS ENTERPRISE AND REGULATORY REFORM Petitioner;
For an order to wind up UK Bankruptcy Limited _______
|
For the petitioner: Olsen; Brodies
For the respondent: No appearance
For the Lord Advocate: Miss Ross;
The Advocate General for Scotland: Lord Davidson of Glen Clova QC, in person
Amicus curiae: Clark QC; D G Hamilton:
21 September 2010
Introduction
[1] This is a petition for the winding-up of UK
Bankruptcy Ltd (the company) under section 124A of the Insolvency Act 1986 on
the ground that the winding-up is expedient in the public interest. On 9 December 2008 a provisional liquidator
was appointed. On 22 December 2008 Paul Mason, one of the two directors and shareholders,
lodged answers to the petition. They bear to be signed by him for and on
behalf of the company.
[2] Mr Mason has produced no evidence that the
Board of the company has authorised him to lodge these answers, or has even resolved
to defend the petition. Therefore, in my view, we should proceed on the basis
that the lodging of answers by Mr Mason has not been authorised by the
company. According to the petitioner, Mr Mason is opposing the petition in
order to forestall disqualification proceedings against him under the Company
Directors Disqualification Act 1986. Mr Mason has not contradicted that
assertion.
The Lord Ordinary's report and subsequent procedure
[3] On 19 February 2009, at a hearing on further
procedure, Mr Mason sought to represent the company in the process. On 16
March 2009 there was a hearing before Lord Hodge on the question whether he was
entitled to do so. Mr Mason submitted (1) that under article 6 of the European
Convention on Human Rights a company has the right to be represented in court
by one of its directors, and (2) that the rule that a company may be
represented before this court only by counsel or by a solicitor having extended
rights of audience is no longer good law.
[4] The Lord Ordinary considered that in consequence
of the rule in Equity and Law Life Ass Soc v Tritonia Ltd (1943
SC (HL) 88), Mr Mason had no right to represent the company; and that, as a
general rule, there was no incompatibility between article 6 and the
requirement that a company must be represented by a suitably qualified legal
representative, who had responsibilities to the court and was subject to
professional discipline. He thought that, nonetheless, exceptional
circumstances could arise in which the court would have to allow a company to
be represented by a person who was not a qualified practitioner in order to
ensure that there was a fair hearing under article 6. The Rules of Court did
not provide for that, but the court could allow it by the exercise of its
inherent power. There was a need for careful consideration of the
circumstances in which that might be done.
[5] The Lord Ordinary has therefore reported
the case to the Inner House on this question. He has considered some possible
procedural safeguards. He suggests that the director or other representative
should have to show that the company has authorised him to act on its behalf;
and that, to avoid any conflict of interest, the company should expressly
authorise the submissions that its representative is to make. He also suggests
that the company should have to satisfy the court that it does not have the
means to obtain legal representation and that its proposed representative is in
a position to present the company's case; and that the court should consider
the nature of any proposed submission to ascertain whether it raises a bona
fide and relevant issue of fact or law.
[6] The Lord Advocate and the Advocate General
compeared. It became apparent to us that both favoured the view that in
appropriate circumstances the present rule should be relaxed. In the
circumstances, we thought it expedient to appoint senior and junior counsel to
act jointly as amicus curiae. They have favoured the same view.
The current rule in Scotland
The Act 1532 c 51
[7] The rule restricting rights of audience in
this court dates from the foundation of the court. In the legislation of 1532
which established the College of Justice, the Act 1532 c 51 provided inter
alia
"That na man enter to pley, bot parties conteined in their summoundes and their procuratoures, gif they will ony have.'
The procurators referred to were the advocates, whose office was instituted, and is still regulated, by chapters 64, 65 and 66 of that year.
The writers
[8] Maclaren's succinct expression of the rule
is that "A member of the Faculty of Advocates is the only person allowed to
plead before the Court of Session, with the exception of a party to the cause"
(Court of Session Practice, p 14). Maxwell explains the underlying
rationale as follows.
"Only a member of the Faculty of Advocates and a party to the cause are entitled to plead in court before the Court of Session. Such a rule, limiting a right of audience on behalf of others to members of the Bar, secures that the Court will be served by advocates who observe the rules of their profession, who are subject to a disciplinary code, and who are familiar with the methods and scope of advocacy which are followed in presenting arguments to the Court" (The Practice of the Court of Session, p 24).
Case law
[9] In Gordon v Nakeski-Cumming
(1924 SC 939) the Inner House considered whether in light of the Married
Women's Property Act 1920, which abolished a husband's right of administration
over his wife's property, a husband could competently appear before it on his
wife's behalf. The rule was restated in that case by Lord President Clyde as
follows.
The right of audience before this Court is ... equally shared by the parties litigant before it, and by duly admitted advocates who appear on their behalf; but it belongs to no one else. Pleadings in cases called before this Court are accordingly presented to it either per party or per procuratorship of counsel, and in no other way" (at p 941).
[10] The rule was enforced by the Second Division
in 1984 when it refused to permit an unqualified person to represent his
elderly father. The court observed that the decision in Gordon v
Nakeski-Cumming (supra) had been acted on consistently (Rush v
Fife Regional Council, 1984 SLT 391).
[11] The only possible departure from that rule
of which I am aware is in Kenneil v Kenneil ([2006] CSOH 95).
That case related to disputes arising from an action of division and sale. The
Lord Ordinary allowed a secured creditor, who appeared in her own right in
relation to certain issues, to represent her husband, who was the second
defender and was otherwise unrepresented. In his consideration of that
procedure, the Lord Ordinary referred to the English practice by which a
litigant in person may be assisted by a McKenzie friend (cf McKenzie v
McKenzie [1971] P 33) and noted that in some cases such assistance had been
permitted in Scotland (para [15]). He observed that in English practice the
court was willing to allow a McKenzie friend not only to assist the litigant in
person but, in certain circumstances, to address the court (para [16]). It is
my impression that in agreeing to the proposal the Lord Ordinary regarded the
second defender's wife as acting as if she were a McKenzie friend, on the view
that she would say only what she and her husband had decided to say. He
regarded it as a material consideration that the second defender's wife had in
part drafted his averments. However, in that case the second defender was
abroad at the time and in the event the decision of the Lord Ordinary was that
he should be "represented" by his wife at the hearing (para [18]).
[12] In Anderson, Petr (2008 SCLR 59), in
similar circumstances, the Lord Ordinary refused a proposal that the case for
the elderly and infirm petitioner should be presented by her son, on the view
that it was not competent in the Scottish courts for a person assisting a party
litigant to address the court on the party litigant's behalf (para [24]).
The extension of rights of audience
Court of Session Act 1988
[13] The Court of Session Act 1988 confers on any
solicitor a right of audience before the vacation judge (s 48(2)(a)) and in
such other circumstances as may be prescribed (s 48(2)(b)). The Rules of Court
allow solicitors without extended rights of audience to appear in limited
circumstances in the hearing of certain motions (RC 23).
The Law Reform (Miscellaneous
Provisions) (Scotland) Act 1990
[14] This
Act made it possible for solicitors to be given extended rights of audience in
the higher courts, civil and criminal (s 24; cf Court of Session Act 1988, s
48(1); s 48A).
[15] The Act also provided a method by which a
professional or other body might enable one of its members who was a natural
person to acquire rights to conduct litigation on behalf of members of the
public and rights of audience in certain courts and in certain categories of
proceedings (s 25). This provision has not been brought into force.
Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act
1995
[16] This
consolidating Act continues provisions that give to all solicitors limited
rights of audience in relation to certain applications, and in preliminary and
interlocutory proceedings, before a single judge of the High Court (s 103(8)).
Conclusion
[17] I mention these provisions by way of
demonstrating that every extension of rights of audience beyond the restrictive
categories of the traditional rule has been effected by way of express
statutory provision. Subject to these specific extensions, the general rule
that I have described has remained in force (cf Asmat Mushtaq v SSHD
[2006] CSOH 19).
Artificial persons
[18] A
separate line of authority relates to the representation of artificial
persons. In Equity and Law Life Ass Soc v Tritonia Ltd (supra)
a company director sought to appear before the House of Lords on behalf of two
companies and with their authority. The House refused to hear him. Viscount
Simon, LC said:
"When an appeal is argued before the House of Lords, no one has any right of audience except counsel instructed on behalf of a party or (when the litigant is a natural person) the party himself. In the case of a corporation, inasmuch as the artificial entity cannot attend and argue personally, the right of audience is necessarily limited to counsel instructed on the corporation's behalf" (at p89)
Although this dictum relates specifically to proceedings before the House of Lords, the principle that it sets out has been applied more widely. It has been applied consistently in the Court of Session (cf the annotations to the Rules of the Court of Session, Parliament House Book, vol 2, para 4.2.6). It has also been applied in ordinary cause procedure in the sheriff court where the right of audience is confined to advocates, solicitors and natural persons appearing on their own behalf (Dana Ltd v Stevenson 1989 SLT (Sh Ct) 43)
[19] In Clark Advertising Ltd v Scottish Enterprise
Dunbartonshire (2004 SLT (Sh Ct)
85) the sheriff principal refused to allow a partnership to be represented by
one of its partners on the view that the right of access to the courts
contemplated by article 6(1) of the Convention was not absolute. He
referred to the public interest justification for requiring an artificial persona
to be legally represented. He considered that there was little doubt that this
rule was both proportionate and legitimate. In Cultural and Educational
Development Assn of Scotland v Glasgow City Council (2008 SC 439) an
Extra Division held that an unincorporated voluntary association could not be
represented in the sheriff court by its secretary, who was not a solicitor. It
expressed the principle in the following way.
"The difficulties which courts commonly encounter where individual party litigants conduct their own cases are eloquent of the reasons for not extending the right of personal appearance beyond the case of the individual natural party. The rules serve to protect not only the opposing party and the court, but also, in the case of voluntary organisations, the members of the association, whose interests might otherwise be prejudiced by the actings of an individual or group of individuals pursuing litigation not truly in the association's interests. We are not to be taken as saying that that is so in the present case, but the risk of such an occurrence in general is part of the justification for the rule" (ibid, at para [11]).
These words were plainly intended to apply to the Court of Session and the sheriff court alike.
Drafting, signing and lodging of writs
[20] Section 32 of the Solicitors (Scotland) Act
1980, as amended by the Solicitors (Scotland) Act 1988 (Sched 1, para 7) makes
it an offence for any unqualified person, as defined in section 65(1), to draft
or prepare inter alia any writ relating to any action or proceedings in
any court (s 32(1)(b)). The exception to that rule is confined to the case
where the unqualified person "proves that he drew or prepared the writ or
papers in question without receiving, or without expecting to receive, either
directly or indirectly, any fee, gain or reward (other than by remuneration paid
under a contract of employment) ... " (s 32(2)(a)). Even if Mr Mason comes
within this exception, I consider that the signing of the answers and the
lodging of them by him, as an unqualified third party, were invalid (cf RC
4.2(4)).
The position in England
[21] English practice in relation to rights of
audience and the right to conduct litigation is more flexible than ours. The
English courts have a discretion, as part of the inherent power, to permit a
representative to appear ad hoc on behalf of a litigant in person (ALI
Finance Ltd v Havelet Leasing Ltd [1992] 1 WLR 455). There is also
a statutory power to that effect (Legal Services Act 2007, Sched 3, para 1(2);
formerly Courts and Legal Services Act 1990, s 27(2)(c)).
[22] The idea that a company could be represented
by an unqualified person had its origins in Lord Woolf's Report (Access to
Justice, 1996). Lord Woolf recommended that a duly authorised employee of a company
should normally be permitted to take any steps on behalf of the company that a
litigant in person could take on his own behalf. This would be subject to the
court's being satisfied that the representative was duly authorised to act, and
to the right of the court to stop anyone who misbehaved from addressing it (ibid,
at p 136).
[23] The Civil Procedure Act 1997 authorised the
making of Civil Procedure Rules and established a Civil Procedure Rules
Committee to make them by way of a statutory instrument (ss 2(1); 3(1)), with
powers to make related practice directions (s 5(1)).
[24] Rule 39.6 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998
(SI No 3132) implements Lord Woolf's recommendation. It provides that:
"A company or other corporation may be represented at trial by an employee if -
(a) the employee has been authorised by the company or corporation to appear at trial on its behalf; and
(b) the court gives permission."
The ancillary Practice Direction provides that:
"Rule 39.6 is intended to enable a company or other corporation to represent itself as a litigant in person. Permission under rule 39.6(b) should therefore be given by the court unless there is some particular and sufficient reason why it should be withheld. In considering whether to grant permission the matters to be taken into account include the complexity of the issues and the experience and position in the company or corporation of the proposed representative."
[25] Rule 39.6 was not related to article 6 of
the Convention, which had not then been incorporated into domestic law. The rule
reflected a policy that access to the courts should be widened. There is no
comparable legislation in Scotland.
[26] In this case the Lord Ordinary doubts
whether the English approach could prudently be imported into Scottish
procedure. He refers to the greater powers of case management enjoyed by the
English courts and to their power to strike out cases that have no reasonable
prospects of success. He considers that without rigorous case management there
is a significant risk that unqualified representatives could take up court time
and cause wasted public costs without benefiting the entities that they
represented. I am of the same view.
Submissions of counsel
[27] There was a general consensus among
counsel that the present rule should be relaxed and that in certain defined
circumstances, and subject to suitable safeguards, it should be competent for a
company to be represented by a lay representative. There was also a general
consensus that the rule should be modified by the court itself, whether by the
use of its inherent power or by an act of sederunt.
[28] The case in favour of the proposal is that
the current rule forces upon companies the expense of legal representation in
all cases, whether or not in any individual case the enforcement of the rule
would be of material benefit to the court or to the company itself. There may
be cases in which a lay representative of a company, for example a director,
may be best placed to articulate the company's position and thereby to assist
the court. The rule also forces upon the company in every case an expense that
may significantly affect its financial position or may be disproportionate to
any advantage that legal representation may bring. In extreme cases, the cost
of legal representation may cause the company not to be represented at all,
with the consequent risk that it may suffer an injustice thereby. For these
reasons it is submitted that the rule is needlessly restrictive, that it may
work to the disadvantage of a company and that it can produce an unjust
outcome.
[29] Counsel for the petitioner moved us to
invoke the inherent power of the court in approving the proposed procedure and
to have the conditions under which it would be competent refined in a statutory
instrument. He suggested that the waiving of the existing rule should be a
matter for the court's discretion, exercised by reference to the public
interest, and with suitable safeguards. Counsel for the Lord Advocate urged us
to proceed by way of act of sederunt under section 5 of the Court of Session
Act 1988.
Conclusions
The nature of the proposal
[30] At present we have no reason to think that
Mr Mason's proposal to defend the petition on the company's behalf has been
duly authorised by the company; but I shall assume that it might be possible for
Mr Mason to produce evidence of such authorisation, if required by the court to
do so. My conclusions on this point proceed on that assumption.
[31] For a proper resolution of the question
reported to us, it is essential at the outset to identify the nature of the proposal.
The proposal is that the case for the respondent company should be conducted by
Mr Mason, who is not legally qualified. His conduct of the case would
include the framing and lodging of answers to the petition, representation of
the company in procedural hearings and oral advocacy in opposition to the
prayer of the petition.
[32] In my opinion, this is in essence a proposal
for rights of audience. As such, in my view, it is in conflict with the Act of
1532 as interpreted in Gordon v Nakeski-Cumming (supra)
and with the related line of authority, specific to corporations, starting with
the House of Lords decision in Equity and Law Life Ass Soc v Tritonia
Ltd (supra).
Is the Act of 1532 in desuetude?
[33] Counsel were divided on this question. Counsel
for the petitioner submitted that the Act is in desuetude. Counsel for the
Lord Advocate and the amicus thought that it is not. The Advocate
General thought that the point is uncertain.
[34] In my opinion, it cannot be said that the
Act of 1532 is in desuetude. The Inner House has held it to be in force twice
in the twentieth century (Gordon v Nakeski-Cumming, supra;
Rush v Fife Regional Council, supra) and, with only the one
possible exception to which I have referred (Kenneil v Kenneil, supra),
its provisions have hitherto been consistently enforced in our courts, subject
only to the modern extensions of rights of audience to which I have referred.
[35] In my opinion, the Lord Ordinary erred in Kenneil
v Kenneil (supra). Although he considered the application by
the wife of the second defender in the context of lay assistance, the effect of
his decision was to give her a free hand to conduct the second defender's case
in his absence. That was incompatible with the idea of lay assistance. The
Lord Ordinary perhaps overlooked the fact that in English procedure a McKenzie
friend could not address the court except with the express allowance by the
court of an ad hoc right of audience under section 27(2)(c) of the
Courts and Legal Services Act 1990, which was then in force (cf Paragon
Finance plc v Noueiri [2001] WLR 2357).
[36] There is no provision in Scotland for the granting of
rights of audience to a lay assistant. The proposed legislation to permit lay assistants
to address the court, to which I shall refer, impliedly withholds such rights.
In any event, I consider that the Lord Ordinary in that case could not have
allowed the second defender's wife to act as his lay assistant, if this is what
he intended her to be, in the absence of the second defender himself (cf Clarkson
v Gilbert [2000] FLR 839).
[37] The decision of the Lord Ordinary in Anderson, Petr (supra) was
correct, in my opinion.
The rule in Equity and Law Life Ass
Soc v Tritonia Ltd
[38] Even
if it could be said that the Act of 1532 was in desuetude or that it could not
reasonably be interpreted to apply to joint stock companies, there would
nevertheless remain the specific rule established in 1943 (Equity and Law
Life Ass Soc v Tritonia Ltd, supra) that a company cannot be
represented in civil proceedings other than by counsel or, where competent, by
a solicitor. Quite independently of the Act of 1532, that rule is rooted in
cogent considerations. I need not rehearse them in detail. It is sufficient
to say that the extension of rights of audience on behalf of companies to
unqualified persons would bring all of the risks to the due performance of the
justice system that are notorious in the case of party litigants. It would
involve the conferment of rights of audience on persons who had received no
training in law or in legal procedure and who were not subject to any code of
conduct or to any form of professional discipline (cf Izzo v Philip
Ross and Co [2002] BPIR 310).
The use of the inherent power and the power to make acts of sederunt
[39] In my view, it is not open to this court to
modify the rule, whether by the use of its inherent power or by act of
sederunt, no matter what conditions or safeguards it might impose.
[40] In any event, I consider that even if it
were open to this court to modify the rule, it should not do so. The proposal
raises questions of social policy relating to rights of audience in the civil
courts. Such questions are not for us to decide. From the brief review of the
legislation that I have given, it is clear that every extension of rights of
audience in the courts has been brought about by express legislation. If there
were to be an extension of rights of audience in relation to artificial legal
persons, that, in my opinion, should be effected only by legislation after the
normal consultative processes of law reform.
[41] This court cannot foresee all the wider
implications of an ad hoc judicial decision to relax the present rule;
nor the practical difficulties that might follow from it. However, certain
practical problems at once come to mind. In a company liquidation or in a
compulsory winding up of the kind with which this case is concerned, I can
think of good reasons why a company should not be represented by a director
whose own actings may have caused the litigation.
[42] Furthermore, the experience of this court
over the last ten years or so has shown that certain indefatigable party
litigants, of whom we have no shortage, in due course make their services
available to other party litigants, either by acting as their lay assistants (Frost
and Parkes v Cintec International Ltd, 9 September 2005, unrepd) or
by taking assignations of their interests (cf Tods Murray WS v Arakin
Ltd, 31 October 2003, unrepd). If lay representation of companies were to
be allowed, it would not be long before such persons would make their services
available for that purpose, as has happened in England (cf Paragon Finance
plc v Noueiri, supra). In POW Trust and Anor v
Chief Executive and Registrar of Companies ([2002] EWHC 72783 (Admin)) the
company was represented by a director, Mr Terence Ewing, who was a serial party
litigant in his own right (cf Ewing v Times Newspapers Ltd, 2010 CSIH 67). In Bournemouth
and Boscombe Athletic Football Club Ltd v Lloyds TSB Bank plc [2004] EWCA Civ 935) the claimant company was represented by a person who had been
appointed as a director for the purpose of conducting the litigation (cf paras
27 and 40).
[43] I am also of the view that the granting of
this proposal would inevitably lead to wider questions of rights of audience in
relation to unqualified persons; for example, in the representation of a trust
by one of its trustees; or the representation of a commercial partnership by
one of its partners.
[44] Even if it were open to us to allow
representation of a company by an unqualified person, these considerations
would persuade me of the unwisdom of our taking that step.
Article 6
[45] The question was raised in the discussion
before us as to whether the enforcement of the present rule could operate to
infringe the human rights of a company under article 6. The submission for the
amicus curiae canvasses the possibility that the present rule
could have that effect if a company had a prima facie valid claim or
defence but was unable to pay for legal representation.
[46] We would have to consider that question only
if there was evidence that the company had authorised Mr Mason to represent it and
that its decision to do so arose from necessity rather than choice. Instead,
we have the uncontradicted assertion of the petitioner that Mr Mason is opposing
this petition in his own personal interest. For these reasons, I consider that
article 6 does not arise in this case.
Lay assistance
[47] Nothing that I have said in this
Opinion has any bearing on the separate question of lay assistance to a party
litigant. It is within the power of the court to allow a party litigant to
have the opportunity, at its discretion, to be assisted by a friend in the
presentation of his case. That may be helpful to the court and in the
interests of justice where a party litigant is, for any reason, incapable of
presenting his own case coherently and clearly. It is not the role of such an
assistant to act as an advocate or a legal adviser and such an assistant does
not have a right of audience. The Act of Sederunt (Rules of the Court of
Session Amendment No 4) (Miscellaneous) 2010 (SSI No 205, para 3) amends the
Rules of Court to specify the scope of the lay assistant's role and and the
conditions on which lay assistance will be permitted.
[48] Sections 91B and 91C of the Legal Services
(Scotland) Bill, if enacted in their present wording, will maintain the
principle that a lay representative, as there defined, does not have a right to
conduct litigation or a right of audience; but, in accordance with a
recommendation of the Scottish Civil Courts Review (Report of the Scottish
Civil Courts Review, 2009, vol 2, ch 11), they provide that the rules of
the Court of Session and of the sheriff court may permit a lay representative
to make oral submissions to the court on the party litigant's behalf. Mr
Mason's application in this case would not be warranted by such provisions.
Disposal
[49] I propose to your Lordships that we return
the case to the Lord Ordinary with a direction that he should decline to accept
Mr Mason as a representative of the company in these proceedings or to receive
writs signed by him.
SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
|
|
Lord Justice ClerkLord ClarkeLord Marnoch
|
[2010] CSIH 80P1975/08 OPINION OF LORD CLARKE
IN THE PETITION OF
HER MAJESTY'S SECRETARY OF STATE FOR BUSINESS ENTERPRISE AND REGULATORY REFORM Petitioner;
For an order to wind up UK Bankruptcy Limited _______
|
For the petitioner: Olsen; Brodies
For the respondent: No appearance
For the Lord Advocate: Miss Ross;
The Advocate General for Scotland: Lord Davidson of Glen Clova QC, in person
Amicus curiae: Clark QC; Hamilton:
21 September 2010
[50] Having had the advantage of reading the
Opinion of your Lordship in the Chair, I am in agreement with it and, in
particular, the disposal of the matter proposed by your Lordship.
[51] I would only add by way of observation the
following. Before this court, as noted by your Lordship, the position of the amicus
curiae was, as set out in his written submission, and advanced in argument,
that "there are circumstances in which the absolute bar which the rule
represents is incompatible with Article 6(1) of the Convention". What the
amicus had in mind, apparently, was a case where a company is genuinely
unable to pay for representation and has a prima facie valid claim or
defence which cannot be vindicated, at all, because of the rule. The Notes of
Argument lodged on behalf of the Advocate General and the Lord Advocate also
appeared to recognise the possibility of the strict application of the general
rule, in a particular case, giving rise to an Article 6 issue. On the
assumption that a company has Article 6 rights, then it seems to me that
there may be force in what was said in that respect, by these various parties,
but for the reasons given by your Lordship in the Chair no question of that
kind arises in the particular circumstances of the present case.
SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
|
|
Lord Justice ClerkLord ClarkeLord Marnoch
|
[2010] CSIH 80P1975/08 OPINION OF LORD MARNOCH
IN THE PETITION OF
HER MAJESTY'S SECRETARY OF STATE FOR BUSINESS ENTERPRISE AND REGULATORY REFORM Petitioner;
For an order to wind up UK Bankruptcy Limited _______
|
For the petitioner: Olsen; Brodies
For the respondent: No appearance
For the Lord Advocate: Miss Ross;
The Advocate General for Scotland: Lord Davidson of Glen Clova QC, in person
Amicus curiae: Clark QC; Hamilton:
21 September 2010
[52] I agree entirely
with the Opinion determined by your Lordship in the Chair.