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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 >> Power v Meloy Whittle Robinson Solicitors [2014] EWCA Civ 898 (02 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/898.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 898 |
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ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Gosnell
2YM04677
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
and
LORD JUSTICE VOS
____________________
Edward Power |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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Meloy Whittle Robinson Solicitors |
Defendant/ Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
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Simon Hale (instructed by Berrymans Lace Mawer) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 19 May 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
"Solicitor within the jurisdiction: Subject to rule 6.5(1), where-
(a) the defendant has given in writing the business address within the jurisdiction of a solicitor as an address at which the defendant may be served with the claim form; or
(b) a solicitor acting for the defendant has notified the claimant in writing that the solicitor is instructed by the defendant to accept service of the claim form on behalf of the defendant at a business address within the jurisdiction,
The claim form must be served at the business address of that solicitor."
"Subject to Section IV of the Part and the rules in this Section relating to service out of the jurisdiction on solicitors, European Lawyers and parties, the court will serve the claim form except where –
(a) a rule or practice direction provides that the claimant must serve it;
(b) the claimant notifies the court that the claimant wishes to serve it; or
(c) the court orders or directs otherwise."
"Where there has been an error of procedure such as a failure to comply with a rule or practice direction –
(a) the error does not invalidate any step taken in the proceedings unless the court so orders; and
(b) the court may make an order to remedy the error."
"The service of the Claim Form by the court in disregard of the Claimant's notification that he wished to effect service himself constitute[s] an "error of procedure" within the meaning of CPR 3.10." – see at paragraph 36 per Underhill LJ.
However in this case there is the additional complication that pursuant to CPR 6.7 the Claim Form had to be served at the business address of the Respondents' solicitor. Before grappling with that issue I will complete the dispiriting chronology of this litigation.
"We enclosed sealed Claim Form which we received on 18 September 2012."
Hard copies were sent by MWR to BLM by post.
"Edward Power v MWR LLP Solicitors
We write further to your letter dated 6 September 2012.
We understand that you issued protective proceedings on the 14 September 2012 although it is unclear whether or not these have been formally served. Please confirm the position.
We attach Part 18 questions arising from the Schedule A responses and look forward to receiving the Claimant's responses with a statement of truth in due course.
We will require an authority form to obtain the Claimant's updated GP records on the basis that the current records do not post date September 2009.
We would invite you to confirm the Claimant's eligibility to pursue a service claims for DIY and Decorating on the basis that Mr Thomson's medical reports provides a grading of 2 V 2SN in the right hand only. There is no confirmation of whether the grading is 2SN late or early and we note that it was not until March 2004 (CSG Bulletin 95) where there was an agreement to upgrade the grading to 2SN late where a Consultant Vascular Surgeon's reports provided no determination of the sensorineural grading. On this basis the Claimant's claim was settled on a 2V 2SN early grading.
We are in the process of obtaining the Claimant's DWP records and any relevant employment records.
We note that you have already been provided with our client's Schedule B disclosure and we can confirm that we will require the Claimant to be medically examined pursuant to Schedule C. Are you able to agree Mr Tennant's instruction."
Since the Claim Form was marked "Solicitor Service" the enquiry in the second paragraph was in one sense justified, as BLM did not know from whom their clients had received the documents. It might have been from either Mellor Hargreaves or the court. However, if Messrs BLM were going to rely, as subsequently they did, upon the need for the proceedings to be served upon them rather than upon their clients, as mandated by CPR 6.7, they knew perfectly well that the proceedings had not been formally served. There was no lack of clarity about the position. On the topic of service this was neither a helpful nor a constructive letter. However the balance of the letter gave every indication that the claim was being dealt with on the footing that it was a live claim being actively pursued by the Claimant.
"Edward Power v MWR LLP Solicitors
We write further to our letter dated 18 September 2012.
We note that we are yet to receive a response to our Part 18 request for further information, these responses were due on 9 October 2012.
We also note that we are yet to receive an authority form so that we may access your clients updated medical records.
We look forward to receiving the above documentation as soon as ever possible."
It is notable that this letter made no reference to the position concerning service of the Claim Form.
"On 27 March 2013 I was engaged with one of my colleagues in the review of the ATE policies in relation to this and a number of other files and I realised that the court had not delivered to this office a copy of the sealed Claim Form. My colleague, Suzanne Wells, spoke to a representative of the court by telephone – Jasmine – who supplied the claim number and said that the claim had been issued by the court on the 14 September 2012. Miss Wells explained that we had not received anything from the court by way of notification or sealed documents for service, whereupon Jasmine said that she would request a copy of the document to be sent to us and we later, on the 3 April 2013, received a document headed "Notice of Issue (Duplicate)" with a copy of the Sealed Claim Form."
It is to be noted that the court did not vouchsafe that it had effected service, or attempted to effect service, upon the Defendant itself.
"(1) The claimant may apply for an order extending the period for compliance with Rule 7.5.
(2) The general rule is that an application to extend the time for compliance with rule 7.5 must be made –
(a) within the period specified by rule 7.5; or
(b) where an order has been made under this rule, within the period for service specified by that order.
(3) If the claimant applies for an order to extend the time for compliance after the end of the period specified by rule 7.5 or by an order made under this rule, the court may make such an order only if –
(a) the court has failed to serve the claim form; or
(b) the claimant has taken all reasonable steps to comply with rule 7.5 but has been unable to do so; and
(c) in either case, the claimant has acted promptly in making the application.
(4) An application for an order extending the time for compliance with rule 7.5 –
(a) must be supported by evidence; and
(b) may be made without notice."
It is of course CPR 7.5 which prescribes that a claim form must ordinarily be served within four months of the date of issue. The Claimant's application was supported by the witness statement of Mr Risby to which I have just referred. In that witness statement at paragraph 16 Mr Risby asked in the alternative for an order dispensing with service of the Claim Form pursuant to CPR 6.16, on the basis that the claim had been extensively set out in the letters before claim and the proceedings had been the subject of a generic court order which provided for the complete disclosure of the documents and evidence in support of the claim. CPR 6.16 provides:-
"(1) The court may dispense with service of a claim form in exceptional circumstances.
(2) An application for an order to dispense with service may be made at any time and –
(a) must be supported by evidence; and
(b) may be made without notice."
"(1) Where it appears to the court that there is a good reason to authorise service by a method or at a place not otherwise permitted by this Part, the court may make an order permitting service by an alternative method or at an alternative place.
(2) On an application under this rule, the court may order that steps already taken to bring the claim form to the attention of the defendant by an alternative method or at an alternative place is good service.
(3) An application for an order under this rule –
(a) must be supported by evidence; and
(b) may be made without notice.
(4) An order under this rule must specify –
(a) the method or place of service;
(b) the date on which the claim form is deemed served; and
(c) the period for –
(i) filing an acknowledgement of service;
(ii) filing an admission; or
(iii) filing a defence."
The Claimant's skeleton argument upon which he relied before Judge Gosnell observed that had the Claimant's solicitors known that the sealed Claim Form had been erroneously served on the Defendants direct by the court, an order for substituted service would have been sought from DDJ Pickup. Plainly this was a reference to CPR 6.15(1), and specifically to CPR 6.15(2), although no reference was made to the rule in the skeleton argument.
1) This was a case where the Claimant before March 2010 had the option of serving the Defendants personally, and since March 2010 the Claimant had had "the option" of serving the Defendants' solicitors, so that there was never a difficulty about effecting service and it was not a case of a Defendant being evasive;
2) Where parties agree to service solicitor to solicitor it is wrong to go behind that agreement; and
3) It is wrong to allow a Claimant "to sidestep the rigours of CPR 6.16" by reliance upon CPR 6.15.
"35. As stated above, in a case of this kind the court should simply ask itself whether, in all the circumstances of the particular case, there is a good reason to make the order sought. It should not be necessary for the court to spend undue time analysing decisions of judges in previous cases which have depended upon their own facts. "
36. The mere fact that the defendant learned of the existence and content of the claim form cannot, without more, constitute a good reason to make an order under rule 6.15(2). On the other hand, the wording of the rule shows that it is a critical factor. As the editors of the 2013 edition of the White Book note (vol 1, para 6.15.5), rule 6.15(2) was designed to remedy what were thought to be defects as matters stood before 1 October 2008. The Court of Appeal had held in Elmes v Hygrade Food Products plc [2001] EWCA Civ 121 that the court had no jurisdiction to order retrospectively that an erroneous method of service already adopted should be allowed to stand as service by an alternative method permitted by the court. The editors of the White Book add that the particular significance of rule 6.15(2) is that it may enable a claimant to escape the serious consequences that would normally ensue where there has been mis-service and, not only has the period for service of the claim form fixed by CPR 7.5 run, but also the relevant limitation period has expired.
37. Service has a number of purposes but the most important is to my mind to ensure that the contents of the document served, here the claim form, is communicated to the defendant. In Olafsson v Gissurarson (No 2) [2008] EWCA Civ 152, [2008] 1 WLR 2016, para 55 I said, in a not dissimilar context, that
"… the whole purpose of service is to inform the defendant of the contents of the claim form and the nature of the claimant's case: see eg Barclays Bank of Swaziland Ltd v Hahn [1989] 1 WLR 506, 509 per Lord Brightman, and the definition of 'service' in the glossary to the CPR, which describes it as 'steps required to bring documents used in court proceedings to a person's attention...'"
I adhere to that view.
38. It is plain from paragraph 73 of his judgment quoted above that the judge took account of a series of factors. He said that, most importantly, it was clear that the respondent, through his advisers was fully apprised of the nature of the claim being brought. That was because, as the judge had made clear at para 60, the respondent must have been fully aware of the contents of the claim form as a result of it and the other documents having been delivered to his lawyers on 22 October in Beirut and communicated to his London solicitors and to him. As Lewison J said at para 4 of his judgment (quoted above):
"The purpose of service of proceedings, quite obviously, is to bring proceedings to the notice of a defendant. It is not about playing technical games. There is no doubt on the evidence that the defendant is fully aware of the proceedings which are sought to be brought against him, of the nature of the claims made against him and of the seriousness of the allegations."
I agree.
39. In addition the judge had regard to the fact that service through diplomatic channels in Lebanon had proved impractical and that any attempt to pursue it further would lead to unacceptable delay and expense. Furthermore, the judge noted that the respondent was unwilling to co-operate with service of the proceedings by disclosing his address in the Lebanon. While I accept the submission made on behalf of the respondent that he was not under a duty to disclose his address, his refusal to co-operate does seem to me to be a highly relevant factor in deciding whether there was a good reason for treating as good service the delivery of the documents in Beirut within the six months' validity of the claim form in circumstances in which the documents came to his knowledge.
40. It was submitted that the judge did not have regard either to the three and a half month delay between the time the appellants issued the claim form and the time they instructed counsel to settle particulars of claim or to the fact that the claim was time-barred. I would not accept those submissions. It is true that he did not expressly refer to either point in the part of his judgment dealing with service but I do not think that he can have been unaware of either point. As to the time bar, the judge was plainly well aware of it. Indeed, he discussed the limitation defence in detail between paras 30 and 33. The significance of the time bar defence was in the minds of the parties and the judge throughout. The judge thought that there was good reason for making an order under rule 6.15(2) notwithstanding that defence and was, in my view, entitled to take that view. As to the three and a half months delay, the judge must have been aware of it. It seems to me to be likely that he took the view that, given the difficulties which faced the appellants in serving the claim form, the delay made no difference. He was entitled to do so. The critical points were that the documents were delivered within the six months' validity of the claim form and brought to the respondent's attention and that service via diplomatic channels had proved impracticable.
41. In these circumstances I do not think that the judge made an error of principle. He correctly directed himself that the question was whether there was a good reason to order under rule 6.15(2) that the steps already taken to bring the claim form to the attention of the respondent constituted good service. He answered that question in the affirmative and was entitled to reach that conclusion.
. . .
48. As I read para 29 [of the judgment of the Court of Appeal], the delay prior to the issue of the claim form was a significant part of the reasoning of the Court of Appeal, although, as I understand it, it was not a point taken on behalf of the respondent. I would accept the submission that (save perhaps in exceptional circumstances) events before the issue of the claim form are not relevant. The focus of the inquiry on an issue of this kind is not and (so far as I am aware) has never been on events before the issue of the writ or claim form. The relevant focus is upon the reason why the claim form cannot or could not be served within the period of its validity. The judge held that there was an issue to be tried on the question whether the appellants' claim was time-barred. In resolving the issues of service, the court had therefore to treat the claim form as issued in time."
Lord Justice Briggs :
Lord Justice Vos :