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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 >> Pannone LLP v Aardvark Digital Ltd [2011] EWCA Civ 803 (12 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2011/803.html Cite as: [2011] NPC 74, [2011] WLR 2275, [2011] 1 WLR 2275, [2011] EWCA Civ 803 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION, MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
His Honour Judge Hodge, (sitting as High Court Judge)
9MA00215
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
____________________
Pannone LLP |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Aardvark Digital Limited |
Appellant |
____________________
Mr Andy Weston and Mr Chris Weston appeared for the Appellant
Hearing date : 15 June 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
Introduction
The facts
"11. After further intervening emails, at shortly after noon on Friday, 23 October, Mr Andy Weston emailed Mr Hanrahan attaching in PDF form a form of consent order. Mr Hanrahan was told that if he was mindful to accept the order, Mr Weston would appreciate being provided with a signed copy of the order. The email continued:
"Finally, Oliver, we appreciate that prior delays were not as a result of your nor counsel's involvement. However, we wish this matter to proceed swiftly to trial and to permit an even greater extension of time now would apply further pressure to the schedule ordered by District Judge Smith. As we are self representing we consider it not to be in our interests to further reduce the time to prepare for each of these pre-trial stages. In light of the above we trust you will consider our offer of an extension to be generous in the extreme."
12. The reference to that was to the attached consent order. That provided as follows:
"Upon reading the correspondence from the claimant and upon the parties confirming their consent at the foot of this order, it is ordered by consent:
(1) The claimant to file and serve its reply and defence to counter-claim by no later than 1 pm on 26 October 2009.
(2) If the claimant does not comply with paragraph 1 the claimant's claim be struck out and the defendant have permission to enter judgment in full for its counterclaim.
(3) All other timescales detailed within the order of District Judge Smith dated 30 September 2009 to remain unchanged.
(4) Costs in the case."
13. Mr Hanrahan's response to that, at shortly before 20 to 1 on the afternoon of Friday, 23 October, was contained in his email to Andy Weston:
"Thank you for your email. I am grateful to you for the short extension of time for service of the defence. As I see it there is no need for there to be any impact on the remainder of the timetable. The terms of the consent order are, on any view, draconian and way more than the court would have ordered. However, I do understand why you have drawn the order in this way and, given that we will be in a position to serve the reply and defence to counterclaim, I am happy to accept your terms. I am arranging for the order to be scanned and returned to you signed. You might please acknowledge receipt of this email.""
"I have seen the witness statements. I have seen the documentation before the Court. I have a general case management power and I read it out to you, Mr Weston, so that you are aware of it:
"The court's general powers of management
Except where these Rules provide otherwise, the court will –
(a) extend or shorten the time for compliance with any rule, practice direction or court order (even if an application for extension is made after the time for compliance has expired)."
I am going to deal with this in a pragmatic way I think, given so much time has been wasted on this issue. The documentation has been filed says 12.59 and so on. It was received late, I am going to extend the time under the order of 9 November 2009. We need to move this matter on. Let's get to the nub of it, let's get to trial, and let's deal with the issues that you have raised in your counterclaim against Pannones."
"44 . . . it is now clear that the fax transmission was not complete until after one o'clock: but it was initiated before the one o'clock deadline, and was completed shortly thereafter. It was then followed up by a complete version which had undoubtedly been received within ten minutes of the one o'clock deadline: and the court received the hard copy the following day, again duly verified by a statement of truth."
"(1) On an application for relief from any sanction imposed for a failure to comply with any rule, practice direction or court order the court will consider all the circumstances including –
(a) the interests of the administration of justice;
(b) whether the application for relief has been made promptly;
(c) whether the failure to comply was intentional;
(d) whether there is a good explanation for the failure;
(e) the extent to which the party in default has complied with other rules, practice directions, court orders and any relevant pre-action protocol;
(f) whether the failure to comply was caused by the party or his legal representative;
(g) whether the trial date or the likely trial date can still be met if relief is granted;
(h) the effect which the failure to comply had on each party; and
(i) the effect which the granting of relief would have on each party."
"47. . . . the court must season justice with mercy. Mr Hanrahan had attempted to comply. Admittedly he has not provided any explanation as to why the email was only sent two minutes before the deadline, and why the fax transmission was only started one minute before the deadline; but, nevertheless, I am satisfied that he was genuinely trying to comply with the consent order; and indeed, in view of the draconian nature of the consent order, which was recognised by him as such, he had every reason to seek to comply. . . .
48. It seems to me here, however, that, whilst it is clear that the filing with the court was just outside the scope of the terms of the agreed consent order, nevertheless the court should exercise its power, as District Judge Obodai did, to grant relief from sanctions. The interests of the administration of justice do dictate that consent orders should be given full force and effect by the court. But, as I have indicated, justice must, in an appropriate case, be seasoned with mercy: and where someone has genuinely taken steps to comply within the agreed time limit, but has just failed to do so, with no prejudice to the other party, it does seem to me that the interests of the administration of justice dictate that the underlying and substantive litigation should be fought out on its merits rather than allowing it to go by default.
49. No application for relief here was made by the claimant because it considered, until the service of Mr MacAuliffe's evidence, that relief from sanctions was not required. District Judge Obodai, of the court's own initiative, granted relief from sanctions at the hearing on 26 February. Had the matter proceeded without the present appeal, there would have been no disruption to any material extent to the timetable for trial. Any disruption to the trial timetable has been as a result of the defendant's actions in mounting this appeal. I have no doubt that the failure to comply was inadvertent and unintentional, save to the extent that Mr Hanrahan only sent the email two minutes before the deadline, and only started the fax transmission one minute before. Nevertheless, he did not intend to breach the terms of the consent order. There is no reason for him to have done so.
50. Whilst there is no explanation for his failure to start the fax transmission until one minute before one, nevertheless one has to bear in mind that he was operating within a timetable which he had rightly described as "draconian", and I can understand why he should have had to wait until almost literally the last minute. I accept that the claimant had been in default with the earlier provision for service: but it was only in default to the extent of one working day, and, in my judgment, that prior default, which had been remedied by the terms of the consent order, albeit in draconian terms, should not preclude the grant of relief from sanctions. The failure to comply was clearly caused by Mr Hanrahan, and not by his client. Had the point not been raised by the defendant, there would have been no outcome upon the likely trial date: and had matters been left as they were after the case management conference on the 26 February, there would have been no material delay to the trial timetable.
51. I must consider the effect which the failure to comply, and the granting of relief, will have on each party. So far as the claimant is concerned, if relief is not granted it will be deprived of a trial on the merits. So far as the defendant is concerned, it will obtain a windfall for which there is no warrant in terms of any corresponding prejudice that it has suffered to weigh against the undoubted detriment to the claimant. If relief is granted, then the case will proceed to trial on the merits rather than pass in default.
52. In furtherance of the overriding objective, it seems to me that everything points one way, which is the result at which District Judge Obodai herself arrived. In my judgment, she took a pragmatic view which was entirely correct: and I therefore dismiss this appeal."
Discussion
"There are two meanings to the words "by consent". That was observed by Lord Greene MR in Chandless-Chandless v Nicholson [1942] 2 KB 321, 324. One meaning is this: the words "by consent" may evidence a real contract between the parties. In such a case the court will only interfere with such an order on the same grounds as it would with any other contract. The other meaning is this: the words "by consent" may mean "the parties hereto not objecting". In such a case there is no real contract between the parties. The order can be altered or varied by the court in the same circumstances as any other order that is made by the court without the consent of the parties. In every case it is necessary to discover which meaning is used. Does the order evidence a real contract between the parties? Or does it only evidence an order made without objection?"
The other members of the court, Eveleigh and Templeman LJJ, agreed, Templeman LJ adding at page 192FH:-
"By the summons dated December 18, 1980, the defendants sought an order that the plaintiffs give further discovery within 10 days after the date of the order and a provision in the order that in default of compliance the plaintiffs' claim against the defendants be struck out. The service of this summons was not an offer and was not intended to create or result in a contractual relationship. The summons constituted a demand and a threat. The threat could only be made effective subject to the power of the court under R.S.C., Ord. 3, r. 5, and under its inherent jurisdiction at any one or more times to extend the plaintiff's time for compliance. If the plaintiffs had written back to the defendants announcing that they would consent to the order sought by the defendants, the announcement would not and could not have constituted acceptance of a non-existent offer or be capable of creating a contractual relationship. The announcement would have been no more than the intimation of an intention on the part of the plaintiffs not to argue against the grant of the relief sought by the defendants but to submit to an order in the terms of the summons."
"Except where these Rules provide otherwise, the court may –
(a) extend or shorten the time for compliance with any rule, practice direction or court order (even if an application for extension is made after the time for compliance has expired)."
This Rule expressly grants the power to extend time, with no derogation in case of an order made "by consent". CPR 3.8 provides:-
"(1) Where a party has failed to comply with a rule, practice direction or court order, any sanction for failure to comply imposed by the rule, practice direction or court order has effect unless the party in default applies for and obtains relief from the sanction.
(Rule 3.9 sets out the circumstances which the court may consider on an application to grant relief from a sanction)
(2) Where the sanction is the payment of costs, the party in default may only obtain relief by appealing against the order for costs.
(3) Where a rule, practice direction or court order –
(a) requires a party to do something within a specified time, and
(b) specifies the consequence of failure to comply,
the time for doing the act in question may not be extended by agreement between the parties."
I particularly note that Rule 3.8(3) again contains no derogation so far as concerns an order made by consent. It would no doubt be rare for the court to decline to give effect to the parties' subsequent agreement to extend the time within which some step was required to be taken by the terms of their earlier consent order, and thus to relieve from the sanction specified, but that the court reserves to itself the power so to do is entirely consistent with the court's general powers of management. It is also consistent with that aspect of the overriding objective which requires the court to allot to a case an appropriate share of the court's resources, while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases. Thus an agreed extension of time by parties who have already agreed to an order imposing sanctions for failure to comply with the existing timetable which will lead, for example, to the vacation of an already oft deferred trial date might not be endorsed by the court in circumstances where the parties have already had allotted to them more than a fair share of the court's resources. It must however I think equally follow that it is inherent in rule 3.8(1) that the power to relieve from sanctions is available in respect of all orders of the court, including those expressed to be made by consent. No exception is made and an implied exception would be inconsistent with the court's general powers of management as embodied in CPR Part 3, part of a "new procedural code" which CPR 1.1(1) tells us has the overriding objective of enabling the court to deal with cases justly.
"There is thus an overriding element of which amounts virtually to a public interest factor, which governs the whole of the CPR, and which was not present in the RSC. In this connection, the duty to manage cases, which clearly incorporates Part 3, the Case Management Powers, is governed by Rule 1.4, "The court's Duty to Manage Cases". Rule 1.4(1) provides:
"The Court must further the overriding objective by actively managing cases.
To my mind, the CPR therefore give the Court rather more wide ranging more flexible powers that the RSC. In my judgment, those powers are to be exercised not merely to do justice between the parties, but in the wide public interest. Further, the objective to deal with a case "justly" must, as I see it, sometimes (albeit rarely) require the Court to override an agreement made between the parties in the course of, and in connection with, the litigation. I consider that that means that the Court has greater power to interfere than before. Having said that, I should add this. Where the parties have agreed in clear terms on a certain course, then, while that does not take away its power to extend time, the Court should, when considering an application to extend time, place very great weight on what the parties have agreed and should be slow, save in unusual circumstances, to depart from what the parties have agreed."
"One can well imagine circumstances which could not be characterised as being wholly exceptional or unusual (for example a bank strike) where a party in the position of the appellants was unable through no fault of his own to comply with an order of this kind. Unless the parties had clearly spelt out their intention that in such circumstances the court could not be invited to exercise its undoubted jurisdiction to extend time, I do not think any such term should be implied."
"24. The overall effect of those cases is that the strict approach of the position before the introduction of the CPR does not apply and the court does have the ability to extend time or grant relief from sanctions in relation to an agreed order made in a consent order. However the court will be slow to do so and will generally hold the parties to the terms of the consent order but that there will be unusual cases where it will be just to extend time or grant relief from sanctions. In all cases the fact that there is a consent order will be a factor upon which the court should place very great weight in exercising the discretion given under the CPR or under any liberty to apply in the consent order."
Later in his judgment at paragraph 34, Ramsey J said this:-
"34. Are these circumstances sufficiently unusual for the court to take the equally unusual course of granting relief from sanctions despite the fact that the agreed order was contained in a consent order and represented part of the agreement by which the trial date was vacated? I have come to the conclusion that the form of the agreed order, the lack of compliance with CPR 2.9 and the fact that unintentionally the period for compliance expired on Good Friday mean that this case is where, if the other factors in CPR 3.9(1) show that it would otherwise be just to grant relief, the court should not refuse relief despite the existence of the consent order. In this case, whilst the agreement between the parties has great importance and the court should clearly be slow to grant relief where there is a consent order given the particular unusual circumstances of this case I would be prepared to exercise my discretion and grant relief."
It follows from what I have said above that for my part I do not think that it was incumbent upon Ramsey J to identify unusual circumstances before being prepared to grant the relief sought. I also doubt whether it can or should be asserted with confidence that the court will "generally" hold the parties to the terms of a consent order. No doubt that is the starting point of the debate but, particularly in relation to a case management decision such as under consideration in this case and before Ramsey J, an approach that the parties will "generally" be held to the terms of a consent order is in my view over-prescriptive and capable of detracting from the need to assess what, in the circumstances, is the weight appropriately to be given to the factor of consent.
Application of the principles to the present case
Lord Justice Lloyd
Lady Justice Arden :