ASLAM AGAINST ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND [2018] ScotCS CSIH_47 (27 June 2018)
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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
[2018] CSIH 47
XA28/18
Lady Paton
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LADY PATON
in the application for permission to appeal to the Court of Session
by
MOHAMMED ASLAM
Applicant
against
ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND
Respondent
Applicant: Party
Respondent: Foyle (sol adv); Shoosmiths LLP
27 June 2018
[1] Section 113(2) of the Courts Reform (Scotland) Act 2014 provides that the Court of
Session may grant permission to appeal against a final judgment of the Sheriff Appeal Court
only if the court considers that the appeal would raise an important point of principle or
practice, or there is some other compelling reason for the Court of Session to hear the appeal.
[2] In this case the applicant is a party litigant. He owns many properties in Glasgow,
renting them out and making an income from rentals. However the Royal Bank of Scotland
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(RBS) exercised their rights under standard securities, and sold 27 of the properties. The
applicant’s position is that the RBS, in breach of their duties, sold the properties at an
undervalue. He raised an action in Glasgow Sheriff Court against the RBS, seeking damages
for his loss.
[3] After a debate on 25 July 2017, Sheriff Deutsch held that the action was irrelevant
and lacking in specification, and dismissed the action (see his judgment dated 17 October
2017, tab 9 of the application). The applicant appealed to the Sheriff Appeal Court. An
accelerated appeal hearing was fixed, without objection, for 18 January 2018. The
applicant’s Note of Appeal was lodged on 14 November 2017 (tab 11). At the hearing on
18 January 2018, the applicant produced a Minute of Amendment and moved to amend his
pleadings. He acknowledged in his Note of Submissions (tab 2), that “there is merit in some
of the sheriff’s criticisms of [the] pleadings” and he sought thereafter to amend in terms of
the Minute of Amendment with a view to answering the criticisms. There had been no prior
notice of the details of any proposed amendment, although the possibility of amendment
was hinted at in the applicant’s Note of Appeal.
[4] The applicant not only moved the Sheriff Appeal Court to allow him to amend, but
sought a discharge of the appeal hearing. He apologised for not intimating the Minute of
Amendment sooner, referring to the absence of his Mackenzie friend and the intervention of
the festive season. The solicitor for the RBS opposed any amendment as coming too late,
and in any event failing to cure the defects in the pleadings. The Appeal Sheriff agreed with
these submissions; refused to discharge the appeal hearing (tab 13); and after hearing
parties, refused the appeal and adhered to the sheriff’s interlocutor of 17 October 2017.
Detailed reasons were given in the courts ex tempore judgment, which was subsequently
typed and lodged in process.
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3
[5] The applicant then sought leave to appeal to the Court of Session (tab 14). On
14 March 2018, the Appeal Sheriff refused leave (tab 15), issuing a judgment of that date.
[6] The applicant now applies in person to the Court of Session for permission to appeal.
In his written application, he explains that:
“4.5 The appeal raises an important point of principle or practice in respect that it
raises the question of what constitutes adequate notice of an appeal hearing, both
generally and in the case of an unrepresented party litigant having no legal
qualifications, in particular where an important and lengthy holiday period such as
Christmas and New Year intervenes. It also brings into question the manner in
which a court conducts its business and explains its conduct and the effects of failing
to do so properly.
4.6 Insofar as it may be considered that the appeal does not raise an important point
of principle or practice, there is also some other compelling reason for the Court of
Session to hear the appeal because of the serious miscarriage of justice resulting from
the decision complained about.”
[7] Thereafter the applicant sets out two grounds of appeal:
“5.1 That the sheriff erred in applying an unduly strict standard when he dismissed
the action on the grounds that the appellant’s case as stated was irrelevant and
lacking in specification.
5.2 That insofar as the sheriff’s criticisms of the appellant’s pleadings were justified,
these are capable of being satisfied by amendment, and the appellant should be
allowed an opportunity to amend. In particular, the appellant is in a position to
identify with greater clarity steps which the respondents ought to have taken in
marketing the properties to establish failure to meet the standard required of a
creditor exercising its rights as a security holder; he is able to clarify his pleadings
with regard to the prices for which the properties should have been expected to be
sold; and he is further able to give greater specification in the calculation of his loss
and damage.”
[8] I am unable to accept the applicant’s submission that the appeal raises “an important
point of principle or practice” concerning adequate notice of an appeal hearing, both
generally and in the case of a party litigant, particularly where Christmas and New Year
intervene. As set out in the Appeal Sheriff’s judgment of 14 March 2018, the appellant had
approximately 2 months to prepare for the appeal hearing, which was ample even where
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public holidays intervened. As for the involvement of a Mackenzie friend and a party
litigant, the UK Supreme Court in their recent decision Barton v Wright Hassall LLP
[2018] 1 WLR 1119 (particularly paragraphs 18 and 42) emphasised that party litigants and their
Mackenzie friends must comply with the rules of court and court administration in the same
way as any other party: to give party litigants special indulgence would, the Supreme Court
observed, render the court system unfair. Finally, in this context I take the view that the
sheriff courts’ conduct of business and communication with both parties cannot be criticised.
[9] I am also unable to accept the applicant’s submission that there is “some other
compelling reason for the Court of Session to hear the appeal”. What has happened in the
present case is a fairly common occurrence in litigation, namely that a claim has been found
to be irrelevant and lacking in specification such that it would be a waste of time and
resources to permit the claim, as pled, to go to a proof before answer involving witnesses,
productions, and court time. It is standard practice for such a claim to be dismissed. The
allowance of any amendment seeking to improve the pleadings with a view to making the
action relevant and specific is a matter entirely for the discretion of the court, taking account
of the timing and content of the proposed amendment. The decisions of the court below
make it quite clear why amendment was not permitted in the present case. Those decisions
were justified and cannot be criticised in the circumstances that prevailed.
[10] For all these reasons, the application is refused.
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