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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Apollo Engineering Ltd v James Scott Ltd [2012] ScotCS CSIH_88 (27 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2012/2012CSIH88.html Cite as: [2012] ScotCS CSIH_88, [2012] CSIH 88 |
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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lady PatonLord MenziesLord Bracadale
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Proposer of two motions: G Politakis, director and shareholder of Apollo Engineering Limited
Appellants: No appearance
Respondents: Ellis QC; MacRoberts LLP
Amicus curiae: Springham
27 November 2012
[1] The
appellants ("Apollo") are currently engaged in an arbitration with the
respondents ("Scott"). In the course of that arbitration, a case was stated
for the opinion of the Court of Session in terms of section 3 of the
Administration of Justice (Scotland) Act 1972. However Apollo's funds ran
out. As a result Mr Politakis, a shareholder and director of Apollo, enrolled
a motion seeking "a court order under Article 6 of the ECHR which would allow
[him] to represent [Apollo] in any future court proceedings [and in] particular
... in relation to the forthcoming Stated Case procedure". Having heard a debate
on 7 and 8 July 2011, this court ruled that Mr Politakis could not
represent his company in court proceedings (Apollo Engineering Limited (in
liquidation) v James Scott Limited [2012] CSIH 4).
[2] Mr
Politakis now seeks leave to appeal that ruling to the Supreme Court.
Further he wishes to move a motion which he had previously enrolled in June
2011 (and subsequently amended on 18 April 2012) in the following terms:
"Apollo Engineering Limited has no assets nor can it raise any further cash to instruct law agents and counsel. Apollo has now assigned to Mr Politakis the damages due by Scott. In line with the Minute of Sist and in terms of Article 6 and Article 1 Protocol 1 of the ECHR, I respectfully crave the court to (a) sist myself, Gabriel Politakis, in room and place of Apollo Engineering Limited in the overall action of James Scott Limited v Apollo Engineering Limited and in the current Arbitration proceedings (b) if the court refuses (a), then as an alternative to sist me as a party to the said action and arbitration and give me the authority to personally implement the suit against Scott."
[3] Scott
opposed both motions. Scott also enrolled two motions, one for an award of the
expenses of the hearing on 7 and 8 July 2011 against Mr Politakis
personally, and the second, for dismissal of the Stated Case in respect that
Apollo has no funds and will be unable to instruct legal representation for the
main hearing which is expected to last 8 days.
[4] The court ex
proprio motu invited Mr Politakis to make submissions, although not a party
to the action.
[5] Mr
Politakis moved the court to grant him leave to appeal to the Supreme Court.
His application to represent his company in court had been much broader than
the current Stated Case proceedings. He had sought a court order allowing him
to represent Apollo "in any future court proceedings". Accordingly the
decision in John G McGregor (Contractors) Ltd v Grampian Regional
Council 1991 SC (HL) 1 did not present an obstacle, as his motion was not
restricted to the Stated Case proceedings. The question at issue was
important.
[6] Senior
counsel for Scott submitted that it was not competent to appeal to the Supreme
Court from Stated Case proceedings arising from an arbitration. Reference was
made to John G McGregor (Contractors) Ltd, cit sup. In any
event, this court's decision on 18 January 2012 was that, esto the court
had the power to permit Mr Politakis to represent his company, the court would
not have exercised that power in his favour, for the reasons set out in
paragraphs [35] to [43] of Apollo Engineering Ltd (in liquidation) v
James Scott Limited, cit sup. Accordingly any discussion about the
nature and extent of the court's powers would be academic in this particular
case, and by definition an unsuitable matter for the Supreme Court.
[7] The amicus
curiae agreed with Scott's submissions, and also referred to Lord Hope's
article on arbitration as revised in Release 17 (February 2012) of Macfadyen on
Court of Session Practice, which confirmed that an appeal to the Supreme Court
from such Stated Case proceedings was incompetent.
[8] Decision:
leave to appeal to the Supreme Court: There is clear authority
that there can be no appeal to the House of Lords or to the Supreme Court from
any opinion of the Inner House in response to a Stated Case in terms of section
3 of the Administration of Justice (Scotland) Act 1972 (John G McGregor
(Contractors) Ltd, cit sup and the article by Lord Hope in Macfadyen
Court of Session Practice, Division J, Chapter 1, paragraph [3]). We agree with
counsel for Scott and with the amicus curiae that this authority applies
a fortiori to ancillary and interlocutory rulings within the Stated Case
procedure. Mr Politakis enrolled his motion concerning his representing
his company in the Stated Case procedure (process no X156/07), and his motion
is, in our view, governed by John G McGregor (Contractors) Ltd, cit
sup. For that reason alone, we refuse to grant leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court. Further, however, it is our view that only matters raising an
arguable point of law of general public importance should be sent to the
Supreme Court. In the present case this court considered all the circumstances
of the case and concluded that, even if it had the power to do so, it should
not exercise that power by granting Mr Politakis' motion, for the reasons set
out in paragraphs [35] to [43] of the opinion [2012] CSIH 4. Thus putting
aside any question of the incompetence of an appeal, we would not have
considered this an appropriate case in which to grant leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court, as any discussion of the court's powers would in our view be
academic to the outcome. We are not therefore prepared to grant leave to Mr
Politakis to appeal to the Supreme Court.
[9] Mr
Politakis relied upon several legal bases in order to justify his being sisted
to the court and arbitration proceedings. (a) Apollo had granted him
assignations of the claim dated 18 April, 28 May, and 11 June 2012 in place of the company. (b) In any event, the court should in the circumstances make
an order sisting Mr Politakis as a party with authority to implement the suit
against Scott. (c) Further, Mr Politakis should be sisted to the
proceedings in his capacity as dominus litis. (d) Finally as a
director of Apollo, he should be deemed to be part of the composite persona of
Apollo, with in effect a power of attorney, and as such entitled to be sisted
in place of Apollo.
[10] Assignations:
Three assignations were made available to the court. The first, dated 18 April 2012, was signed by a Mr Tucker of 8 Wemyss Crescent, Troon. We were advised
that Mr Tucker had assisted Mr Politakis in raising funds for the litigations,
but that he had no connection with Apollo. Mr Politakis explained that Mr
Tucker had been intended to be a witness to the deed. Mr Politakis was
content not to attempt to rely upon that assignation.
[11] The two
other assignations were in the following terms:
SUPPLEMENTARY ASSIGNATION
by
APOLLO ENGINEERING LIMITED
in favour of
GABRIEL POLITAKIS ESQ
May 2012
We, Apollo Engineering Limited ... (the Company) IN CONSIDERATION of part of the same sum of TWELVE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED POUNDS (£12,500) paid in relation to the Damages Assignation dated 18 April 2012 of which sum hereby [sic] acknowledge payment was made on behalf of the Company to the Arbiter, one John D Spencely CBE, by Mr & Mrs Politakis ... do hereby ASSIGN and MAKE OVER to Mr Gabriel Politakis the part of the sums due to the Company by James Scott Limited ... which are deemed not to be included in the Damages Assignation and we the Company grant warrandice; IN WITNESS WHEREOF
[Signed by G Politakis
28 May 2012]
ASSIGNATION
by
APOLLO ENGINEERING LIMITED
in favour of
GABRIEL POLITAKIS ESQ
April 2012
We, Apollo Engineering Limited .... IN CONSIDERATION of the sum of TWELVE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED POUNDS (£12,500) STERLING of which sum hereby [sic] acknowledge payment was made on behalf of the Company to the Arbiter, one John D Spencely CBE, by Mr & Mrs Politakis ... do hereby ASSIGN and MAKE OVER to Mr Gabriel Politakis the damages due to the Company by James Scott Limited ..., and we the Company grant warrandice; IN WITNESS WHEREOF
[Signed G Politakis
11 June 2012]
[12] Mr
Politakis acknowledged that Scott's position was that the assignations were
invalid and ineffective because of a prohibition against assignations contained
in the parties' sub-contract. The relevant clause in the sub-contract was as
follows:
"2 Execution of Sub-Contract work
... (e) The Sub-Contractor [Apollo] shall not assign the benefit of the Sub-Contract nor sublet the whole or any part of the Sub-Contract works without the prior written consent of Scott."
Mr Politakis contended, first, that as Scott were in repudiatory breach of the sub-contract, they could not rely upon Clause 2(e). Secondly and in any event, properly construed, the clause prohibited the assignation of the "performance" of the contract, but not the "fruits" or "benefit" of the contract (including the several million pounds owed to Apollo for its completed performance). Reference was made to the non-assignation clause in Flood v Shand Construction Ltd and others [1997] 81 BLR 31. Mr Politakis accepted that the Flood clause contained a proviso, namely:
" ... Provided always that the Sub-Contractor may without [the previous written consent of the Contractor] assign either absolutely or by way of charge any sum which is or may become due and payable to him under this Sub-Contract."
Mr Politakis submitted that a similar proviso must be implied in the sub-contract between Scott and Apollo. Accordingly the assignations were valid and were not struck at by the non-assignation clause. On the basis of the assignations, the court should allow Mr Politakis to be sisted to the proceedings in place and in room of the company, in terms of his motion.
[13] In
any event, the court should make an order sisting Mr Politakis as a party with
authority to implement the suit against Scott: Mr Politakis submitted
that the court should take into account all the circumstances of the
long-running dispute between Apollo and Scott, and against that background
should in any event order that he be sisted as a party to the action and the
arbitration, with authority personally to implement the suit against Scott.
[14] Dominus
litis: Mr Politakis contended that, in any event, as a director of
Apollo, he should be sisted to the court proceedings as dominus litis.
[15] Power
of attorney: Mr Politakis explained that one recognised way of
circumventing a non-assignation clause was the use of a power of attorney. He
referred to an article entitled "Unassignable Rights" by Michael Bridge of the London School of Economics. A managing director such as himself in effect had a
power of attorney from the company. Mr Politakis had also been placed in
control of the company as a result of the Company Voluntary Arrangement.
Accordingly the assignations did not bring a "third party" into direct
contractual relations with Scott (which was what Clause 2(e) sought to prohibit).
Mr Politakis as assignee could therefore enforce the company's claim in the
name of the assignor Apollo.
[16] Senior
counsel pointed out that there were several ongoing processes: (i) the original
action James Scott Ltd v Apollo Engineering Ltd, raised in 1991
and sisted for arbitration in 1993; (ii) the arbitration; (iii) the Stated
Case procedure, which had arisen out of the arbitration. Senior counsel
submitted that it was clearly incompetent, within the confines of the Stated
Case procedure, to seek to be sisted to other proceedings such as the original
action, or to the arbitration proceedings.
[17] Assignations:
It was denied that Scott had been in repudiatory breach. But in any event,
accepting that the contract had terminated in some way, contractual clauses
could survive such termination: cf Photo Production Ltd v Securicor
Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827 at pages 840-844. Exclusion clauses,
arbitration clauses, and non-assignation clauses were normally intended to
survive where one party claimed that performance was impossible because of
repudiatory breach: cf Lord Justice-Clerk Ross at page 573 of Lloyds Bank
plc v Bamberger 1993 SC 570. In the present case, the
non-assignation clause was intended to regulate the parties' relationship
notwithstanding the alleged repudiatory breach, for all the reasons given in Linden
Gardens Trust Ltd v Lenesta Sludge Disposals Ltd [1994] 1 AC 85 at pages 102 to 109; Flood v Shand Construction Ltd and others [1997] 81 BLR
31; and James Scott Ltd v Apollo Engineering Ltd 2000 SC 228
(Lord Johnston). There were cogent commercial reasons why parties intended to
have the ownership of the "benefit" of the contract governed by the contract
despite alleged repudiatory breach. Consistently with that approach, the
parties' contract contained a binding arbitration clause. The case of ANC
Ltd v Clark Goldring & Page Ltd and another [2001] BCC 479 was
distinguishable as the contract terms were to survive termination only if
expressly said to do so, or by implication. Contracts very different from that
of Apollo and Scott were dealt with in Bawejem Ltd and another v MC
Fabrications Ltd and others [1999] BCC 157 and Ruttle Plant Hire
Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment and Rural Affairs [2008] BCC 790. Thus Scott's position was that the non-assignation Clause 2(e)
prohibited the attempted assignations relied upon by Mr Politakis, and rendered
them invalid and ineffective, a fortiori as the wording of Clause 2(e)
did not justify a division into "performance" and "fruits or benefits".
[18] In
any event the court should not make an order sisting Mr Politakis as a party:
There was no legal basis upon which the court could rely to order that Mr Politakis
be sisted as a party to the court proceedings. Any reliance on Article 1 of
Protocol 1 was misplaced, as the claims were in Apollo's possession. As for
Article 6 of the ECHR, this court's previous opinion dated 18 January 2012 considered and dealt with Article 6.
[19] Dominus
litis: A company director was not a dominus litis: cf Eastford
Ltd v Gillespie 2011 SC 501, at paragraphs [11] and [13]. In
that context, it was noteworthy that Mr Politakis did not have the entire
interest in the outcome: McCuaig v McCuaig 1909 SC 355. In any
event, being sisted as a dominus litis would only give Mr Politakis an
opportunity to speak in court on his own behalf about his liability for
expenses: he could not speak on behalf of Apollo.
[20] Power
of attorney: Mr Politakis and Apollo were undoubtedly separate legal personae:
cf Secretary of State for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform v
UK Bankruptcy Ltd 2011 SC 115, and Linden Gardens Trust Ltd, cit
sup. Any power of attorney (actual or deemed) gave Mr Politakis power to
take executive steps for the company: but it did not authorise Mr Politakis
to speak on behalf of the company in court.
[21] The
court's ultimate discretion: Senior counsel submitted that, even if he
were wrong in all the preceding arguments, the court should exercise its
discretion when deciding whether or not to sist Mr Politakis to the court
proceedings. The court should adopt the same reasoning as that contained in
the Opinion of 18 January 2012, and should refuse to sist Mr Politakis for the
reasons given.
[22] Miss
Springham adopted all of Scott's submissions, adding that unless some reason
could be shown for not following Lord Johnston's decision in James Scott Ltd
v Apollo Engineering Ltd 2000 SC 228, that decision should be
followed. In relation to the question of a dominus litis, Mr
Politakis's motion was misconceived: cf Eastford Ltd v Gillespie,
cit sup. Even if Mr Politakis were to be sisted as dominus litis, his
interest in proceedings would be restricted to the question of expenses: cf Nairn
v South-East Lancashire Insurance Co Ltd 1930 SC 606 at page 615.
He would not be able to address the court on behalf of the company.
[23] In relation
to Article 6 of the ECHR, that matter had been thoroughly explored in the
previous judgment dated 18 January 2012. No new issue arose. If the
assignations were not valid, Mr Politakis had no civil rights to be
determined. If the assignations were valid, the court had discretion whether
or not to grant his motion. Strasbourg jurisprudence recognised that it was
compatible with Article 6 if domestic law required an appellant to be legally
represented before a Court of Cassation (an appeal court). Stated Case
proceedings were equivalent to a Court of Cassation. Thus this court had an
Article-6 compliant power to control the persons appearing before it.
[24] Even with
the Woolf reforms, applicants in England could be rejected on the grounds
referred to in paragraphs [35] to [43] of Apollo Engineering Limited (in
liquidation) v James Scott Limited [2012] CSIH 4. One further
matter of note was that any assignation by Apollo in favour of an individual
would simply pass to that individual as assignee all the rights, powers, and
obligations of the cedent (Apollo): cf Blyth Dry Docks & Shipbuilding
Company Limited v The Commissioners for the Port of Calcutta 1972
SLT (Notes) 7. As Apollo had no right to appear in court without legal
representation, Mr Politakis as assignee of Apollo inheriting all its
rights, powers, and obligations, would be in the same position. In short, if
the cedent required legal representation in court (as this court decided in Apollo
Engineering Limited (in liquidation), cit sup) then the assignee,
who could have no greater rights or powers, also required legal
representation. Finally, esto the assignations in favour of Mr
Politakis were valid, a fair balance had to be struck between the general
interests of the community and the protection of an individual's fundamental
rights: Broniowski v Poland (2005) 40 EHRR 495 at pages 540 to
549. Thus Mr Politakis' lack of experience, the complexity of the litigation,
and the two prior arbitrations could be taken into account.
[25] Mr
Politakis in reply stated that if he were not sisted and permitted to speak on
behalf of Apollo, then there was a grave danger of an injustice or a
miscarriage of justice. Scott were preventing Apollo from accessing justice.
The court should either reverse its decision of January 2012, or sist Mr Politakis
in place and in room of the company. It would take Mr Politakis only a day to
explain why approximately £3 million was due and resting owing to Apollo.
Mr Politakis renewed his motion to be sisted in place of the company. He
reiterated that the non-assignation clause was no obstacle, for the reasons
already given. In the light of discussion during the debate, he no longer
insisted upon his motion to be sisted as a dominus litis.
[26] The
assignations: In our view, the non-assignation clause in the parties'
subcontract continues to have effect, despite the termination of the contract.
As explained in Linden Gardens Trust Ltd, James Scott Ltd v Apollo
Engineering Ltd, and Photo Production Ltd, cit sup, clauses such as
exclusion clauses, arbitration clauses, and non-assignation clauses, may be
intended to survive a situation where one party claims that performance is
impossible because of repudiatory breach: cf Lloyds Bank plc v
Bamberger 1993 SC 570, per Lord Justice Clerk Ross. In each
case, the question is one of the proper construction of the contract. In the
present case, we are of the opinion that the non-assignation clause, Clause
2(e), was, on a proper construction of the contract, intended by the parties to
continue regulating their positions even although one party claimed repudiatory
breach: cf Linden Gardens Trust Ltd, Flood v Shand Construction Ltd
and others, cit sup.
[27] Further,
we are not persuaded that, on a proper construction of Clause 2, parties
intended to differentiate between "performance" and the "benefits" or "fruits"
of the subcontract. While there was an express proviso in the clause in Flood
making clear that a party could assign the benefits or fruits (although
being unable to assign the performance), no such language is used in the
present subcontract, and indeed Apollo is expressly prohibited from assigning
"the benefit" of the subcontract without Scott's written consent (cf the
observations of Lord Browne-Wilkinson at page 105D-H in Linden Gardens Trust
Ltd cit sup). While we were invited to hold that a proviso such as
that in Flood must be implied in Clause 2, we do not consider that the
tests for implying such a term (contradicting as it does the plain meaning of
Clause 2(e)) have been satisfied.
[28] As for the
Court of Appeal decision in ANC Ltd v Clark Goldring & Page [2001] BCC 479, that is, in our view, distinguishable. The particular contract in
question contained a clause expressly providing that terms would continue after
termination of the contract only if that was provided for expressly or by
implication. Some clauses did so provide. That is not the case here.
[29] Accordingly
in our view Clause 2(e), properly construed, is effective to prevent any valid
assignation of Apollo's rights, powers and obligations under the subcontract
being assigned to Mr Politakis: cf the conclusion reached by Lord Johnston in James
Scott Ltd v Apollo Engineering Ltd 2000 SC 228. It follows
that Mr Politakis' motion to be sisted to the court proceedings, so far as
that motion is based on the assignations, falls to be refused. For
completeness we should add that we agree with senior counsel for Scott that it
is not possible for Mr Politakis to enrol a motion in the Stated Case
proceedings seeking to be sisted in other proceedings such as the main action
in the Court of Session, or the arbitration proceedings. We also add that we
agree with the point made by the amicus curiae that, even if the
assignations were valid and effective, they would place Mr Politakis in the
shoes of the cedent: assignatus utitur jure auctoris. Thus if the
cedent (Apollo) required legal representation for the purposes of appearing in
a court or in an arbitration, then the assignee could not appear without legal
representation.
[30] Whether
the court should in any event make an order sisting Mr Politakis as a
party: We see no basis in principle or precedent for this court to
ordain that Mr Politakis be sisted as a party to the Stated Case proceedings or
to any other proceedings with authority personally to implement the suit
against Scott. Article 6 of the ECHR and the exercise of the court's
discretion were issues considered and dealt with in Apollo Engineering
Limited (in liquidation) v James Scott Limited [2012] CSIH 4. Any
claim based on Article 1 of the Protocol to the ECHR would depend upon the
assignations being valid and enforceable. As it is our opinion that they are
neither (see paragraphs [26] to [29] above) this argument fails.
[31] Dominus
litis: We agree with counsel's submissions on this matter, and note
that Mr Politakis no longer insists upon that part of his motion seeking to be
sisted to the court proceedings as a dominus litis.
[32] Power
of attorney: It is accepted that Mr Politakis is a managing director
of Apollo, and that he has for many years had executive control over the
company (in effect similar to a power of attorney). However he is a separate
legal person from the company and has to persuade the court that there is some
legal basis upon which he should be sisted in place and in room of the
company. The references to his position of executive power qua managing
director, or officer in control as a result of the Company Voluntary
Arrangement, cannot change that situation. Accordingly we are not persuaded
that the court should sist Mr Politakis in place of Apollo.
[33] Conclusion:
In the result therefore we refuse Mr Politakis' motion to be sisted to the
court and arbitration proceedings.
[34] Senior
counsel for Scott submitted that it was a motion enrolled by Mr Politakis
which caused the 2-day hearing in July 2011. Mr Politakis had been
unsuccessful (Apollo Engineering Limited (in liquidation) v James
Scott Limited [2012] CSIH 4). The normal rule should apply, and expenses
should follow success. It was competent to award expenses against someone who
was not a party to the action: Macphail, Sheriff Court Practice (3rd
ed) paragraph 19.03; Brownlie v Tennant & Company (1855) 17D
422 at page 425 ("every litigant" - not "every party" - being subject to the
power of the court in relation to expenses); Thomson v Edinburgh and
District Tramway Company Limited (1901) 3F 355 at pages 357 to
358; Moore v The Scottish Daily Record and another 2009 SLT 27
paragraph [14]. By lodging the Minute of Sist, and bringing a motion for sist
to court, the pursuer became a "litigant" in that he put something forward in a
litigation, and he caused expense (cf Brownlie, cit sup)
[35] Senior
counsel accepted that Scott's motion for dismissal of the Stated Case
became relevant only if Mr Politakis were to be unsuccessful in both his
motions (for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court, and to be sisted in place of
the company). In that event, counsel invited the court to dismiss the Stated
Case. Apollo had no legal representation. It had been made clear over a
considerable period that Apollo could not afford such representation. The
whole basis of the 2-day hearing in July 2011 was that there was no option but
that Mr Politakis should represent the company. The terms of the motions
enrolled by Mr Politakis stated that the company had no assets or funds. For
example, the motion enrolled in February 2011 (which led to the hearing in July
2011) stated in paragraph 8 that Apollo was insolvent and could not afford to
pay for legal representation. The motion enrolled in June 2011 (to sist Mr
Politakis in place of the company i.e. one of the motions currently being
heard) stated that Apollo had no assets and could not raise any further cash to
instruct law agents and counsel. The Minute of Sist lodged by Mr Politakis
stated in paragraph 33 that the company had "zero assets" and could not afford
to pay for legal representation. If Mr Politakis were unsuccessful in the
two motions currently before the court, no-one would appear on behalf of Apollo
at the substantive hearing. No-one would be able to explain Apollo's
position. The Stated Case contained questions proposed by Scott (designated by
the addition of the capital letter "A"): but Scott did not wish to insist on
their questions if there was no appearance for Apollo. Scott's questions were
relevant only in the event that Apollo's questions were insisted upon. The
arbiter's draft opinion had made clear that he intended to dismiss all of
Apollo's craves (debated before him by a solicitor-advocate acting for Apollo)
with one exception concerning materials remaining on the site. Thus Scott did
not require to insist upon the Stated Case in the event that Apollo did not
appear, and it would be better and more expeditious to refer matters back to
the arbiter.
[36] In answer
to a question from the bench, it was conceded that it might be thought logical
and reasonable to await the substantive hearing in the Stated Case procedure;
or to fix a substantive hearing and put the case out By Order some two
months prior to the hearing in order to assess the circumstances. But the fact
was that it had been frankly and consistently acknowledged that Apollo did not
have the funds or assets necessary for any litigation or arbitration, and was
not likely to have such funds or assets in the future. That was the reason
underpinning Mr Politakis's motions to be allowed to represent Apollo in future
proceedings. In those circumstances, the Stated Case should be dismissed.
[37] Mr
Politakis opposed both of Scott's motions. Scott had in effect embezzled
£400,000 due and resting owing to Apollo. The main contractor in 1993 had
ear-marked £400,000 paid to Scott to be passed on to Apollo. Apollo had never
received it. If the court would allow Mr Politakis to be sisted in place of
the company, he intended to by-pass the Stated Case, enrol a motion for the
dismissal of the arbiter, and make a "part-award" application in the
arbitration. There was no need for the Stated Case. Meantime however the
Stated Case should not be dismissed, but should remain in the background in
case the court did not permit Mr Politakis to speak on behalf of Apollo.
Matters could be progressed if the court either (a) ordained Scott to pay
Apollo the £400,000 due; or (b) allowed £35,000 which had been lodged by
Quantum Claims on behalf of Apollo as caution in the Stated Case process to be
released to assist with the funding of Apollo's case and to permit counsel to
be instructed. If the court were to grant Scott's motion for expenses against
Mr Politakis personally, that would bankrupt him, and he would be unable to
speak in court. That was of course Scott's aim: to bankrupt him so that he
could not represent Apollo, and thus to stop any progress in the case. Mr Politakis
reminded the court that, in the event of decisions adverse to his interests, he
still had the right to address the Supreme Court and the court in Strasbourg.
[38] After the
debate in court, the amicus curiae provided additional written material
on the question whether it might be competent to award expenses against someone
who was not a party to the action. Such additional material would normally
require discussion at a By Order hearing. However on the view which we have
taken on the question of expenses (see paragraphs [39] to [41] below) it has
proved unnecessary to explore that question further.
Decision: (i) the expenses of the 2-day hearing in July 2011 and (ii) whether the Stated Case should be dismissed
[39] Apollo is
the party to the litigations and the arbitration, not Mr Politakis.
Apollo's lack of funds and resultant inability to instruct legal representation
was the underlying cause of the 2-day hearing in the Stated Case
proceedings on 7 and 8 July 2011. We note that £35,000 was lodged as caution
on behalf of Apollo in the Stated Case process. In our opinion, as Scott have
been successful in the 2-day debate, the most equitable ruling in relation to
expenses would be to find Apollo liable to Scott in the expenses occasioned by
the hearing on 7 and 8 July 2011, such expenses being met out of the sum held
as caution. We propose to adopt that course.
[40] In relation
to Scott's motion for dismissal of the Stated Case, Mr Politakis has been
unsuccessful in his endeavours to represent Apollo in legal proceedings.
Apollo currently has no funds or assets whereby legal representation could be
obtained, and appears highly unlikely ever to acquire such funds or assets. In
all the circumstances, including Mr Politakis' candid acceptance before us that
Apollo's financial circumstances had not changed, we consider that at any
future hearing Apollo will be unrepresented and will be unable to move or
oppose motions, make submissions, answer questions from the court, or take any
other effective steps in the proceedings. That being so, it seems to us fruitless
to permit the Stated Case proceedings to continue. We shall therefore dismiss
the Stated Case.
[41] For the
reasons given above, we refuse Mr Politakis leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court. We refuse his motion, enrolled in June 2011 and amended on 18 April 2012 (a) to sist him in room and place of Apollo or alternatively (b) to sist him
as a party to the court and arbitration proceedings specified in the motion.
We find Apollo liable to Scott in the expenses of the two-day hearing on 7 and 8 July 2011, such expenses to be paid out of the sum held as caution for Apollo. We make
no finding of expenses against Mr Politakis personally. We dismiss the
Stated Case, reserving meantime any question of expenses in that process insofar
as not already dealt with, to enable the court to be addressed on that matter
if necessary.