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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> North Lombard North Central v. Stewart & Anor [2007] ScotSC 72 (10 December 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2007/72.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotSC 72

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A4788/05

 

NOTE BY SHERIFF PRINCIPAL

JAMES A TAYLOR

in the causes

North Lombard North Central

PURSUERS/RESPONDENTS

against

 

David Stewart

FIRST DEFENDER

and

Anthony Byrne

SECOND DEFENDER/APPELLANT

                                                                        

 

 

My Lords,

 

[1] This was an appeal at the instance of the second defender, Mr Anthony Byrne. Mr Byrne represented his own interests. The pursuers were represented by Mr Munro, solicitor. There was no appearance on behalf of the first defender. The defenders were sued as guarantors of certain obligations undertaken by a company known as Mailstream Packaging Ltd to the pursuers. Evidence was led on 25 October 2006, 4 December 2006, 20 December 2006 and 22 December 2006 at which time the Sheriff took the case to avizandum. Mr Byrne had conducted the proof on his own behalf. When the case was at avizandum the pursuers enrolled a motion seeking to have the crave amended to reflect that it was for joint and several liability. The Sheriff refused that motion. There was no appeal against that decision. When the Sheriff pronounced his judgment he found in favour of the pursuers but given the terms of the crave found the second defender liable for one-half of the sum sued for, namely £1,700. The second defender appealed that decision to me.

 

[2] At the outset of the appeal hearing Mr Byrne moved his motion, 7/2 of process, and asked that the case be sisted. He had requested documents from the liquidator and was hopeful that he would receive them sometime soon. These documents would establish that Mr Byrne had made payment of the £1,700 to the pursuers. He explained that Mr Brady, a witness whom he called to give evidence, was unable to produce bank statements prior to the proof. The bank had indicated that they would charge £10 per sheet. Since there were over 200 sheets the cost would be £2,000. That was why they could not be produced. Mr Brady discovered that the original bank statements were in fact with his accountants. He had discovered this some two weeks ago. As a consequence he now had the cheque numbers. The bank will now be able to produce the cheque. This cheque would demonstrate that the debt which the pursuers sued for had been paid. It would take some five or six weeks for the bank to produce the cheque. I should allow the case to be sisted for this purpose.

 

[3] Mr Byrne further submitted that on the last day of proof the defenders had lodged certain documents in process. The Sheriff had allowed them to be received. Mr Byrne had been prejudiced by the allowance of these documents as one of the witnesses whom he would have wished to put the documents to had concluded his evidence and been excused by the court. Under reference to the productions, which are to be found at 5/8/K, 6/1 and 5/4 of process, Mr Byrne sought to persuade me that the agreement founded upon by the pursuers (5/1 of process) was a forgery. To substantiate this he drew my attention to the fact that on 5/8/K of process, which is a document entitled "Short Proposal Form", it is stated that the outstanding balance due under the agreement which the pursuers had with Mailstream Packaging Ltd was £8,700.95. That document, submitted Mr Byrne, was dated 31 March 1998. He then drew my attention to 6/1 of process which is an HPI Classic Check which disclosed that the date of the last keeper change was 3 April 1998. He then referred to 5/4 of process which disclosed the opening balance on the account to be £19,138.12 which reduced to £18,700.95 on 7 May 1998. This, he submitted, was consistent with the amount shown on the Short Proposal Form (5/8/K of process). Thus, he submitted, the original agreement between Mailstream Packaging Ltd and Lombard North Central (5/1 of process) must be a forgery. It bears to have been dated 7 April 1998 but, submitted Mr Byrne, it must have been prior to 31 March 1998. He acknowledged that the signature on the lease purchase agreement (5/1 of process) was his. Mr Byrne submitted that there was a second agreement which he had signed and that such agreement was in place prior to the original agreement upon which the pursuers now founded. He required the sist in order that he could obtain the original agreement from the liquidator. He referred me to the second edition of Macphail at page 286 where it is stated that the whole of a document should be produced and not just part thereof. Mr Byrne accepted that effectively what I was being asked to do was sist the cause to allow further productions to be lodged and to thereafter allow further evidence to be led. I enquired if he could tell me what the test was for an appellate court to allow additional evidence. He was not in a position to so address me.

 

[4] I was then addressed on part three of Mr Byrne's motion. He moved the court to order that the shorthand notes of the evidence be extended. The case should be sisted pending extension of the notes. The notes were said to be necessary because the pursuers put written submissions to the Sheriff. These had not been seen by Mr Byrne at the time of the proof. He had now seen them. The notes of evidence will disclose that the evidence pled did not support the submissions made in writing. All of the written submissions had not been addressed orally by Mr Munro at the conclusion of the proof. Mr Byrne accepted that the cost of producing the notes would probably be in excess of the sum in dispute.

 

[5] I was informed by Mr Byrne that he did not insist upon the fourth paragraph of his Note.

 

[6] Mr Munro, in an appropriately brief reply, submitted that if the cheque which Mr Brady was now to produce was of such critical importance then it should have been produced before now. In so far as producing the shorthand notes was concerned, Mr Munro informed me that there was nothing in the written submissions which he had put up to the Sheriff which he had not addressed in the oral submissions which he made. The written submissions had been his aide memoire when addressing the court. Mr Munro then took me to the case of Cook v Crane 1922 SC 631; Trojan Plant Hire Company Ltd v Durafencing (Northern) Ltd 1974 SLT (Sh Ct) 3 and various passages in Macphail Sheriff Court Practice 3rd Edn. Mr Munro submitted that it was a matter for the discretion of the Sheriff hearing evidence as to whether productions should be received late. The interlocutor of 4 December was deficient in that it did not record that productions had been lodged on that day. The production 5/8/K was from his recollection lodged with the court on 4 December 2006. He pointed out that the record of payments (5/4 of process) disclosed that there was a balance of £18,700.95 due at 7 May 1998. The Short Proposal Form (5/8/K of process) was an undated document and therefore there was nothing significant in it disclosing the balance being £18,700.95 also. The Short Proposal Form did not say that at the outset of the agreement the balance had been £18,700.95. To interpret it otherwise as Mr Byrne did was just wrong. Even if he was wrong in that, he submitted that having lodged the document on 4 December and proof having been continued to 20 and 22 December 2006, Mr Byrne had ample time to consider the import of the document and address it in the course of evidence. If there was another agreement, as Mr Byrne suggested was the case, Mr Byrne would have known about it since Mr Byrne acknowledged he would require to have signed it. He would have known about it from the outset of the action. Accordingly the tests set out in the cases to which he had referred me were not met. In particular he founded on what was said by Lord Hunter in Cook at page 635 and by Sheriff Principal Sir Allan G Walker QC in Trojan Plant Hire at page 7. I should therefore refuse to sist the cause to allow Mr Byrne to lodge further productions, lead further evidence and have the shorthand notes extended.

 

[7] I came to the view that the motion to sist the action should be refused. It was implicit in the motion and explicitly accepted by Mr Byrne that were it to be granted I would require thereafter to allow further evidence. The test was correctly identified by Mr Munro in the two cases to which he referred me. Lord Hunter in Cook said:-

 

"It appears to me that cases where either in the Court of Session or in the Sheriff Court additional proof will be allowed to one of the parties after proof has been led will be extremely few. In all cases where such indulgence is given to one or other of the parties special cause must be shown for the indulgence craved."

 

In Trojan there is a quote from Lord Justice-Clerk Thomson in Thompson v Glasgow Corporation 1962 SC (HL) 36:-

"The parties to litigations have to run the risk of error in preparation and presentment. There are no second chances in litigation, and it is in the public interest ut sit finis litium."

 

Sheriff Principal Sir Allan Walker QC put it thus:-

 

"Although in my opinion the pursuers have failed to establish in the light of their own actings that this motion can be justified, I might nevertheless feel bound to grant the motion, if I were satisfied that, without the new evidence, there might well be a miscarriage of justice."

 

[8] From a perusal of the three productions (5/8/K, 6/1 and 5/4 of process) I was not persuaded that they pointed to the inevitable conclusion that the document upon which the pursuers founded in this action was not the proper agreement. The Short Proposal Form (5/8/K of process) is not dated. It is perfectly possible that the proposal form refers to the same agreement as the pursuers lodged in process. If there was another agreement Mr Byrne acknowledges that he would have signed it. If therefore he thought the pursuers were relying upon the wrong agreement he ought to have lodged the correct agreement as a production. The agreement upon which the pursuers founded is 5/1 of process and was lodged with the court on 5 July 2005. Accordingly Mr Byrne had ample opportunity to reflect upon its terms. I was not prepared to sist the case allow him a further opportunity to do that which he could and should have done some time ago. It was significant that at the diet of appeal the proposed new productions were still not available.

 

[9] In so far as the missing cheque was concerned, again this was a matter which Mr Byrne was fully aware of many months prior to the proof. Had proper enquiry been made at an earlier stage the cheque could have been found. I was not prepared to sist the case in order that the records of a bank might be obtained and which might, or might not, support Mr Byrne's position. Had something been produced to the court which at least, ex facie the document, led one to the conclusion that a miscarriage of justice would be perpetrated were an opportunity not given to Mr Byrne to recover the cheque, different considerations might apply. However I was invited to proceed on the basis that there might be a miscarriage of justice depending upon what was recovered from the bank. In my opinion the test was not made.

 

[10] In the course of Mr Byrne's submissions I reminded him of the terms of what is said in the third edition of Macphail Sheriff Court Practice at paragraph 18.63 to the effect that the obligation is upon the appellant to produce timeously the notes of evidence upon which he proposes to found. Although not explicitly stated by Mr Byrne I formed the impression that he had explored the costs entailed in extending the notes and, perhaps for pragmatic reasons, had decided not to obtain them. However, it is not for the court to order production of the Notes of Evidence which would then have exposed the Scottish Court Service to the liability for payment. In any event the purpose for which Mr Byrne sought to make use of the notes seemed to me to miss the point. I was prepared to accept that Mr Munro, as an officer of the court, had done as he said and had covered all the matters referred to in his written submissions when addressing the court at the conclusion of the evidence. But even if he had not, the Sheriff had still an obligation to rely upon the evidence led when making his findings-in-fact. There did not seem to me to be any merit in this submission. It is not for the court to fund the extension of notes. Accordingly I refused the motion.

 

[11] Mr Byrne then submitted that he was not prepared for the appeal. He sought leave to appeal my decision to refuse to discharge the diet of appeal and sist the action. I did not invite Mr Munro to address me on this. I refused leave. Whether a sist of an action should be granted is a matter for the discretion of the court. As a general rule leave should not be granted to appeal a discretionary decision. To have allowed leave to appeal would have meant that the appeal could not have proceeded and my decision thus undermined. The second defender would have succeeded by the back door.

 

[12] Mr Byrne then submitted that he was suffering from ill health. He was going to the hospital for check ups. There was a virus within his system. It had been there for over one year. I refused Mr Byrne's motion to adjourn today's hearing. There was no soul and conscience certificate produced.

 

[13] A short adjournment was then allowed to Mr Byrne to enable him to gather his thoughts for the appeal. That adjournment was for 25 minutes.

 

[14] In support of the sixth ground of appeal Mr Byrne submitted that the Sheriff had erred in allowing certain documents into process. In particular he took exception to 5/1 and 5/6 of process. 5/1 is the lease purchase agreement upon which the pursuers relied. 5/6 is an Alfa Agreement History Report. The basis of the opposition was that in terms of Rule 9.3 all documentation should be supplied to the defender with the initial writ. Mr Byrne said that he had never received copies of these productions prior to the proof commencing. In particular the Alfa Report should not have been allowed into the evidence as it was an incomplete document. Only three of thirteen pages had been supplied. In the course of the evidence Mr Kay, one of the witnesses for the pursuers, had relied upon information which was contained in some of the pages which had not been produced. I was referred to the case of Unigate v Scottish Milk Marketing Board 1975 SC (HL) 75 and in particular to the rubric where it was said that it was unsatisfactory for the court to have to interpret part of a formula without the court having had sight of the whole formula. Reference was also made to the speech of Lord Fraser of Tullybelton at page 106 to much the same effect. Mr Byrne submitted that he had been given inadequate time to consider the documents. Had he been aware that they had been lodged in process in partial form he would then have been able to take steps to recover the whole document. He referred me to the case of Murray's Trustees v Wilson 1945 SC 51 where it was said by Lord President Normand that in most cases when construing a will the whole will should be before the court. Similar considerations applied to 5/1 of process which is the lease purchase agreement. Only two pages were before the court and they could not be properly read. The missing pages would disclose that he, Mr Byrne, had exercised his right of termination under the lease purchase agreement. Since that had not been supplied to the court he was prejudiced and had been deprived of his defence.

 

[15] I considered there to be no merit in this ground of appeal. 5/1 of process was lodged on 5 July 2005 on the same day as the initial writ was lodged for warranting. 5/6 of process was lodged on 21 February 2006. Evidence did not commence until 25 October 2006. Any prudent litigant would check the process prior to a proof. There is no obligation on one party to furnish the other party with copy productions albeit that is sometimes the practice. Rule 9.3 which was founded upon by Mr Byrne does not refer to productions. In any event it was not clear to me how he had been prejudiced. If he had exercised a right given to him in terms of the contract one might have expected him to produce the contract. It is normal for the party founding upon a particular clause to ensure that the clause is before the court. If there were parts of a document which he wished to rely upon then he could have produced it himself. I was not told the relevance of the missing parts of the Alfa Report. It was not said that the documents which were before the court could not be interpreted without the whole document being there. Therefore the two cases to which I was referred did not seem to be in point.

 

[16] Mr Byrne then turned his attention to the ninth ground of appeal to the effect that the Sheriff had not taken into consideration that Mr Byrne had to deal with matters of which he had no prior notice and therefore the Sheriff had erred in law. This was a reference to the Sheriff having allowed productions to be lodged in the course of the proof after Mr Kay, a witness for the pursuers, had concluded his evidence and been excused. Mr Byrne submitted that the document lodged pointed unequivocally to there having been an agreement entered into prior to 7 April 1998, the date which the copy lease purchase agreement (5/1 of process) bears to have. There must have been an earlier agreement. This was a reference to the point made by Mr Byrne when he sought to have the appeal hearing discharged and the action sisted. I refer to paragraph [3] of this Note. Mr Byrne submitted that the Sheriff had erred in not looking into the issue of consideration. The pursuers had not been clear as to which agency the car had been registered with. Was it HPI or was it another? 5/10 of process had been lodged on 20 December 2006. That document refers to magnetic tapes. It was submitted that sometimes tapes go astray. It was stated that the evidence from the pursuers had been all over the place. Yet the Sheriff had taken the documents at face value to support Mr Kay's evidence. The Sheriff had erred.

 

[17] In the course of Mr Byrne's submission I invited Mr Munro to clarify when certain documents had been lodged. Unfortunately the interlocutors are deficient in that they do not record when certain productions were lodged. In particular 5/7 and 5/8 were lodged in process in the course of the proof, that was not in dispute, but there is no interlocutor allowing them into process. Mr Munro thought it likely that they had been introduced into the evidence on 4 December 2006. The documents which had been lodged on 20 December 2006 had been used by him only to test the credibility of a witness and it was at the conclusion of the cross-examination of the witness that the documents were formally lodged. It seemed to me that whether a document was lodged was a matter for the discretion of the court. There was no material before me which would suggest that that discretion had been improperly exercised. At no point was I referred to the judgment of the Sheriff to show that he had misdirected himself.

[18] Mr Byrne then advanced his eleventh ground of appeal. The pursuers had failed to provide him with a copy of the written submission. There were three points in particular which he said had not been mentioned by Mr Munro in oral submission but which were contained in the written submission. On the first page under the heading "Pursuers' Evidence" it is said that a further inspection of 5/1 of process discloses that a "1" was subsequently changed to a "2". The second point was under the heading "Defenders' Evidence" where it was said that the defenders' position had changed during the course of cross-examination and evidence in chief. Mr Brady challenged that. His evidence had been completely consistent. He had used the termination right within the agreement. The third point which he referred to was in the chapter headed "Payment of £7,381.08". He referred to the Alfa Report (5/6 of process) which again he said was incomplete.

 

[19] I considered there to be no merit in this ground of appeal. I refer to paragraph [10] of this Note.

 

 

 

 

Glasgow

      December 2007


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