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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Sidhu & Anor v Memory Corporation Plc [2000] EWCA Civ 9 (21 January 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2000/9.html Cite as: [2000] 1 WLR 1443, [2000] WLR 1443, [2000] FSR 921, [2000] EWCA Civ 9, [2000] CPLR 171 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM (HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION (HART J)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ROBERT WALKER
and
MR JUSTICE ALLIOTT
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SIDHU & ANR |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MEMORY CORPORATION PLC |
Respondent |
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London EC4A 2HD
Tel No: 0171 421 4040, Fax No: 0171 831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr T Higginson (instructed by Mishcon de Reya for the Respondents)
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE ROBERT WALKER:
"Without the prior knowledge or consent of the other directors of DHK or Memory, Mr Sidhu has substantial interests in at least two other businesses, including the intended Second Defendant Sunsar Limited ("Sunsar"), a company registered in England and Wales and carrying on business here. He is also a director and shareholder in a company called Microsimm India PVT Limited ("Microsimm India"). Those two companies have been doing substantial business with DHK. Mr Sidhu has been using his position as Managing Director of DHK with a view to benefiting those two companies unlawfully thereby causing substantial loss to Memory and DHK."
"In the event that the Defendants claim to be entitled to the benefit of such a privilege, they must provide such allegedly privileged information to the supervising solicitor who will hold such information to the order of the court."
"In the end counsel for the plaintiffs felt unable to maintain that sentence in view of that authority which was not shown to Hart J. He, himself, was not aware of that authority. I think it is unfortunate that his solicitors may have been (they were also solicitors in Den Norske) but that is not a matter for me to deal with today."
"It seems to me that here we have an example of an order which, although there may be cases in which parts or even all of it are justified, is not an order which ought normally to be made where a Mareva order is granted. Its extremely oppressive nature is not justified on the material before me. All I have on the material before me is evidence suggesting that this defendant dishonestly operated a company, of which he was managing director, for the plaintiffs by doing transactions with companies in which he had an interest when he should not have done.
Necessarily, there is always evidence of dishonesty where there is a successful application for a Mareva order, and if the plaintiffs were right in this case then the additions to the standard they have obtained here would be made in all cases. The additions themselves would become the new standard."
I think an extension from the standard form of order of this great extent requires special justification. I am told that the Vice-Chancellor made such an order in the Den Norske case, but I do not know the details of what happened before the Vice-Chancellor. It is also the case that the order itself was, to some extent, challenged in the Court of Appeal and this aspect of it was not challenged. Whether the order would have been found to be oppressive or not I do not know."
"Paragraphs 3 and 4 are again in the form prescribed by the practice direction, and 5."
(The transcript actually reads 'proscribed' in each place, but it is agreed that that is an obvious error.) There was some discussion to the effect that the appointment of a supervising solicitor was not a normal part of a freezing order, but that Mr Gould (the supervising solicitor for the search order) had recommended it.
"I should at this point record my firm conclusion, formed as a result of the way in which he conducted himself both on the original application and on the present discharge application, that there was nothing deliberate in Mr Higginson's acts and omissions. Mr Howe, on behalf of the first defendant, made much of the fact that I had been left without a full explanation as to how the misrepresentation came to be made to me. The fact was that Mr Higginson was at a loss to explain how he had come to say the fateful words. I think the explanation probably was that the draft was based on the form of the order recently obtained by his solicitors from the Vice-Chancellor in the Den Norske litigation, and which was being used as a precedent within the firm. The basic format of that order was in accordance with the standard form, but the exceptional nature of paragraphs 4 and 5 had not been noted, and was regrettably missed by Mr Higginson when he presented it to the Court."
"It is perfectly well settled that a person who makes an ex parte application to the court - that is to say, in the absence of the person who will be affected by that which the court is asked to do - is under an obligation to the court to make the fullest possible disclosure of all material facts within his knowledge, and if he does not make that fullest possible disclosure, then he cannot obtain any advantage from the proceedings, and he will be deprived of any advantage he may have already obtained by means of the order which has thus wrongly been obtained by him. That is perfectly plain and requires no authority to justify it."
"Of course, in the context of an application without notice the existence of both duties provides an important safeguard to the defendant, and a breach of either duty in that context requires to be treated very seriously. It does not, however, follow, that, because both duties in that context share the same aim, the same consequences should flow from a breach of either. The sanction underpinning the duty of disclosure is the threat that if it is not complied with the party who, or whose lawyers, are in breach will be deprived of the fruits of the process. ... The effective policing of the advocate's duty does not, however, in the same way require (although it may in a particular case justify) the imposition of that particular sanction."
"The applicant should recognise his responsibility to present his case fully and fairly to the court and that he should support it by evidence showing the principal material facts upon which he relies."
"Must show the utmost good faith and disclose his case fully and fairly ... He must identify the crucial points for and against the application, and not rely on general statements and the mere exhibiting of numerous documents. He must investigate the nature of the cause of action asserted and the facts relied on before applying and identify any likely defences."
"Full disclosure must be linked with fair presentation. The judge must be able to have complete confidence in the thoroughness and objectivity of those presenting the case for the applicant. Once that confidence is undermined he is lost."
"Ordinarily this court should not distinguish between the litigant himself and his advisers. There are good reasons why the court should not: first, if anyone is to suffer for the failure of the solicitor it is better that it be the client than another party to the litigation; secondly, the disgruntled client may in appropriate cases have his remedies in damages or in respect of the wasted costs; thirdly, it seems to me that it would become a charter for the incompetent (as Mr MacGregor eloquently put it) were this court to allow almost impossible investigations in apportioning blame between solicitor and counsel on the one hand, or between themselves and their client on the other. The basis of the rule is that orders of the court must be observed and the court is entitled to expect that its officers and counsel who appear before it are more observant of that duty even than the litigant himself."
"I am not aware of the method that was used to obtain the information because it is considered to be a business secret. However, based on the above criteria, I do not believe that there has been a breach of the Data Protection Act 1984."
"It is the fact that the information turned out to be inaccurate which points much more forcibly to the probability that in obtaining it the sub-contractor employed means which constituted an offence under the Data Protection Act 1984. But the applicants were obviously unaware of the inaccuracy of the information. While the consequence may be (I do not decide the point) that documents obtained or produced in the course of the investigation will not enjoy the privilege from discovery which otherwise they might (see Dubi Aluminium Co v Al Alawi & Ors [1999] 1 ALL ER 703 ), I am not persuaded that the applicant was in breach of its duty of disclosure in not airing with the court the possibility that the information had been illegally obtained. I should add that, in arriving at this conclusion, I am very far from accepting Mr Burger's evidence that, in the circumstances which now obtain, there is any relevant confidentiality in the name of the sub-contractor or in the method actually used by the sub-contractor to obtain the information in question. I would also add that it seems to me desirable that the court should in the future be more astute than perhaps it has been in the past to be satisfied that information of this nature, placed before it on a without notice application, is both accurate and lawfully obtained."
"It seems to me that if investigative agents employed by solicitors for the purpose of litigation were permitted to breach the provisions of such statutes or to indulge in fraud or impersonation without any consequence at all for the conduct of litigation, then the courts would be going far to sanction such conduct. Of course, there is always the sanction of prosecutions or civil suits, and those must always remain the primary sanction for any breach of the criminal or civil law. But it seems to me that criminal or fraudulent conduct for the purposes of acquiring evidence in or for litigation cannot properly escape the consequence that any documents generated by or reporting on such conduct, and which are relevant to the issues in the case, are discoverable and fall outside the legitimate area of legal professional privilege."
Order: Appeal dismissed with costs.