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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 >> Poule Securities Ltd v Howe & Ors [2021] EWCA Civ 1373 (21 September 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/1373.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Civ 1373 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BOURNE AND POOLE COUNTY
COURT AND FAMILY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BERKLEY
C00BH467
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BIRSS
and
SIR CHRISTOPHER FLOYD
____________________
POULE SECURITIES LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HOWE & ORS |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Justin Shale for the Respondent
Hearing date : 20th July 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Birss :
6 The claimant do disclose the conveyancing file of the solicitors who acted on the purchase of the property subject to these proceedings in the event the solicitors refuse to provide a copy of the file the claimant is to file and serve a copy of their letter requesting disclosure and a copy of the solicitors response. Such disclosure is to be made within 28 days of the date of this order.
1 Unless by 7 days of this order the claimant comply with paragraph 6 of the order of 27 September 2018, as ordered by DDJ Lacey on 27 September 2018 the claim and defence to counterclaim shall be struck out automatically without any further order of the court.
2 […]
3 This order has been made without a hearing under the Court's Case Management powers contained in part 3 of the Civil Procedure Rules, and/or without notice to yourself. You may within 7 days of service of this Order upon yourself apply to the Court to set aside or vary the order under Part 3.3(5) Civil Procedure Rules. You must file with the Court (serve on the other party/ies) an application which sets out your reasons for objecting to the order. When your application including your reason(s) for objection to the order are received by the Court the application will be listed for a hearing unless the Court feels this is unnecessary or you request the Court to vary the Order without a hearing.
(i) UPON hearing counsel for the claimant and the 1st and 2nd defendants in person.
(ii) And Upon the claimants confirming that they have obtained the conveyancing file but have not yet disclosed it to the defendants.
(iii) And Upon the court finding that the claimant remains in breach of Paragraph 6 of the order of 27 September 2018
(iv) and in breach of the order of 29 November 2018.
(v) And Upon the court noting that pursuant to the order of 29 November 2018 the claim stands struck out and the defence to the counter claim stands struck out.
IT IS ORDERED THAT
1. The claimants application to set aside the court order of 29 November 2018 is refused
2. Pursuant to the order of 29 November 2018 the claim stands struck out.
3. Pursuant to the order of 29 November 2018 the defence to the counterclaim is struck out and judgment is entered in favour of the Part 20 Claimant on the counterclaim with damages to be assessed.
4. By 4pm on 7 January 2019 the Part 20 Claimant's shall notify the court and the parties whether they intend to continue with the counterclaim. In the event the counterclaim is being pursued the parties shall file and serve draft proposed directions by 4pm on 21 January 2019.
5. The claimant shall pay the defendants costs of the claim to be subject to detailed assessment in default of agreement.
6 […]
i) the first ground was a point on the meaning of paragraph 6 of the order of DJ Lacey;
ii) the second ground challenged the making of the unless order;
iii) the third took points on the unless order itself, arguing that its true meaning was that the time compliance ran from the date of service whereby Poule was not out of time before DJ Williams, and also that the order was drafted in breach of the rules; and
iv) the fourth ground was a submission that the judge had been wrong to refuse an extension of time as well as a point on privilege relating to the documents.
Ground 2
2.9 Dates for compliance to be calendar dates and to include time of day
(1) Where the court gives a judgment, order or direction which imposes a time limit for doing any act, the last date for compliance must, wherever practicable –
(a) be expressed as a calendar date; and
(b) include the time of day by which the act must be done.
(2) Where the date by which an act must be done is inserted in any document, the date must, wherever practicable, be expressed as a calendar date.
Orders requiring an act to be done
8.1 An order which requires an act to be done (other than a judgment or order for the payment of an amount of money) must specify the time within which the act should be done.
8.2 The consequences of failure to do an act within the time specified may be set out in the order. In this case the wording of the following examples suitably adapted must be used:
(1) Unless the [claimant][defendant] serves his list of documents by 4.00 p.m. on Friday, January 22, 1999 his [claim][defence] will be struck out and judgment entered for the [defendant][claimant], or
(2) Unless the [claimant][defendant] serves his list of documents within 14 days of service of this order his [claim][defence] will be struck out and judgment entered for the [defendant][claimant].
Example (1) should be used wherever possible.
Ground 1
"District Judge Williams […] Now, I don't know who drafted the application [to set aside] and it's not for me to, to get involved in that, but the reality is that, based on that application, it doesn't get anywhere close to giving me sufficient information, justification or reasoning as to why the Claimant has failed to comply with, a) the first order, whenever that was, b) the order that I do know about which is 27 September, what steps it took to try to comply with 27 September, I don't even yet know the full picture of that, and why, therefore, it has failed to comply with the Unless Order. I, I simply can't see how the application can succeed. And conceivably the result of the 29 November order is that the 7 days have come and gone and the Claimant hasn't complied with an Unless Order which means, as the order says, the claim and defence to counterclaim is automatically struck out. So, I think the Claimant's in the territory of making an application for relief from sanctions.
Mr Cook: Yes, Sir.
District Judge Williams: But I don't think you're in a position to do that today.
Mr Cook: Not in a position to do that today, no, Sir, for the simple reason there'd be a lack of evidence --
District Judge Williams: Yeah, yeah.
Mr Cook: To support that, available to support that application.
District Judge Williams: Well, I'm not sure that we can take it any further than that, can we?
Mr Cook: No, Sir."
Sir Christopher Floyd:
Lord Justice Lewison: