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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 >> Travelers Insurance Company Ltd v Armstrong & Anor [2021] EWCA Civ 978 (01 July 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/978.html Cite as: [2021] Lloyd's Rep IR 454, [2021] EWCA Civ 978, [2022] 1 All ER (Comm) 1366 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
(BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURT)
Mr Andrew Hochhauser QC (sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
and
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
____________________
Travelers Insurance Company Ltd. |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Armstrong & Anr -and- Berrymans Lace Mawer LLP |
First Respondent Second Respondent |
____________________
Mr Christopher Boardman QC (instructed by Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP) for the First Respondent
Mr Ben Hubble QC (instructed by Mills & Reeve LLP) for the Second Respondent
Hearing date : 26 May 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE COULSON :
1 Introduction
2 The Background Facts
3 The Deed of Assignment
"(I) Transform has or may have claims against the Potential Defendants for breach of contract, negligence or other breach of duty or tort arising out of or concerning the conduct of the defence by BLM of Transform's defence in the Litigation…"
"1. The Administrators hereby:
i) assign to Involegal absolutely all claims, choses in action and rights whatsoever which Transform has or may have against the Potential Defendants arising out of or concerning the conduct of the defence by the Potential Defendants of Transform's defence in the Litigation ("the Assigned Claims");
ii) agree to provide Involegal with reasonable access to any and all documentation which is in the Administrators possession and control which relates to Transform's defence in the Litigation, to include any privileged documentation. The Administrators also agree to use their reasonable endeavours to co-operate in a timely manner with any requests made by or on behalf of Involegal…"
4 The Judgment
"115. It is important to remember that the Joint Retainer files sought by the Administrators, are the property of Transform. Where an application is made pursuant to section 234 of the 1986 Act, adopting the approach taken in the Re Corporate Jet case, "there is little or no argument that the Court may order a person to deliver up books and records that belong to the company in question". Travelers do not seem to me materially to challenge that entitlement.
116. The dispute revolves around what the Administrators are entitled to do with the documents and materials contained in the Joint Retainer files once they have them. As stated at paragraph 33 above, it is common ground that both Transform and Travelers can see the Joint Retainer files, but neither can disclose it to a third party without the other's consent. Thus if the Administrators had not assigned the Assigned Claims, would they be entitled to use the documents within the Joint Retainer files for the purposes of proceedings in relation to such claims and to instruct solicitors to advise in that regard? In my viewhttps://www.bailii.org/cgi-bin/format.cgi?doc=/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/2064.html&query=(armstrong)+AND+(v)+AND+(berrymans) - disp87 Travelers could not prevent this and as I understand it, it accepts this. That exercise would not require a waiver by Travelers, because a party's solicitors are not to be regarded as independent third parties, but as the agents of those instructing them. Such an approach is consistent with the Winterthur case where at [116], Aikens J held that whilst documents that are obtained in the exercise of common interest privilege obviously cannot be used for any purpose the applicant wishes, it is clear that they can be used in litigation between the two parties who at an earlier stage had a "common interest". Another permitted purpose, therefore, would be for the Administrators to use the documents in seeking advice from solicitors in relation to possible litigation relating to the claims that were subsequently assigned by Transform, and in any litigation which followed.
117. In my judgment, the key issue here relates to the effect of the Assignment and the entitlement of HJI, following the execution of the Assignment. In Winterthur, Aikens J held at [130] that the right to access privileged information can be transferred by the Assignment of rights of suit. This is because the assignee of such rights stands in the position of the assignor. If HJI are to be regarded as assignees, then the successor principle applies. However, as Mr Lynch points out, correctly in my view that paragraph was dealing with a situation where there was sole, as opposed to common interest, privilege. Aikens J treated "common interest" privilege and "joint" privilege as being governed by the same principles, see [133]. I agree and therefore I will adopt the same approach as he did. With joint privilege, the position is as set out at [134] of Winterthur, namely that the Assignment of the causes of action comes with "all its benefits and burdens", one of which is that the Joint Retainer files are subject to a privilege that is jointly shared with Travelers. I accept Mr Lynch's submission that the Assignment cannot put HJI in a better position to that in which Transform had been prior to the Assignment. It is in the same position as the Administrators, but no better.
118. It therefore follows that if the Administrators would have been entitled to use the documents and materials in litigation relating to the Assigned Claims, without seeking a waiver from Travelers, why should HJI, as an assignee not be in the same position? In the present situation, in my judgment, there has been an effective Assignment of rights of suit against BLM and counsel by the Administrators to HJI. Clause 1(i) of the Assignment between the Administrators and HJI is drafted in wide terms, assigning "absolutely all claims, choses in action and rights whatsoever" that Transform might have against BLM and counsel. It follows from that where the assignor would have been entitled to disclose privileged information to his solicitors, an assignee would equally be entitled to do so. It follows that HJI has equal entitlement to access the Joint Retainer files as have the Administrators to the extent that Travelers cannot invoke the joint privilege against them for the purpose seeking advice and litigating the Assigned Claims .
119. I would make clear that in reaching this conclusion, and in finding that HJI are entitled to access the Joint Retainer files as assignees, I do not do so on the basis of overriding any joint privilege in favour of a third party or interpreting the provisions of section 234 and 236 of the 1986 Act so as to abrogate privilege. In my judgment, all that is being done here is to enable Transform's documents, namely the Joint Retainer files, some of which are privileged, to be delivered up to the Administrators, who are entitled to provide access to HJI to them as assignee of Transform's cause of action of the Assigned Claims for the purpose of seeking advice and pursuing litigation in relation to those claims. It seems to me that there is no need to rely upon the provisions of section 236 of the 1986 Act here. In my view, the remedy sought by the Administrators is to be found within section 234. I would make it plain, however, that had I regarded HJI as a third party, as opposed to the assignee of Transform's cause of action of the Assigned Claims, I would not have overridden privilege in order to provide it access, either under the provisions of section 234 or 236 of the 1986 Act."
5 The Relevant Assumptions
6. The Relevant Law
6.1 The Authorities
"I have emphasised that the privilege is the privilege of the company. This statement is subject to the qualification that the privilege enures for the benefit of successors in title to the party to an action, at any rate, where the relevant interests subsist."
"The rule recognises that joint clients cannot maintain privilege against each other and as the privilege of the bankrupt had devolved on to the trustee who is entitled to obtain the privileged information from the bankrupt, in my judgment it is appropriate to treat the trustee as being in the shoes of the bankrupt for the purpose of privilege in proceedings against the joint client."
"25 Obviously the first question is what was transferred to the claimants in this case. Undoubtedly it seems to me the intellectual property in so far as title subsisted to it including the patents if the Vendor owned them. So it seems to me that the claimants can claim privilege to this extent. I would hold also that it is implicit in this proposition that the claimant is entitled to copies of the privileged material from the solicitors at its own expense. This follows, it seems to me, because otherwise the privilege is valueless, since the claimants have no means of knowing what material they are asserting privilege in. It seems to me that this follows from the existence of the privilege itself and not from any entitlement to the documents in question under the Agreement…"
"31 Given that concession, it is common ground that (a) Euan cannot rely upon LPP to deny Tom and Freya (or Twin Benefits as their successor in title) inspection of the documents, but (b) Tom and Freya (and Twin Benefits) cannot waive LPP so as to permit inspection of the documents by the defendants without Euan's consent. Ms Meek has consulted Euan's mother, who does not consider that it would be in Euan's best interests to waive LPP. Although it would be open to Ms Meek, as Euan's litigation friend, to take a different view as to Euan's best interests, she does not. At this stage, Twin Benefits does not challenge Ms Meek's view.
32 It follows that LPP would not prevent Twin Benefits from inspecting these documents, but prima facie it would prevent Twin Benefits from deploying the documents as part of its case in these proceedings. In those circumstances, counsel for Ms Meek submitted that rule 31.17(3) (a) was not satisfied. Counsel for Twin Benefits submitted that it was not necessary in order for rule 31.17(3)(a) to be satisfied for the applicant to show that the documents themselves could be deployed as part of its case. Once Twin Benefits had seen the documents, it could attempt to prove their contents in other ways. In the alternative, counsel for Twin Benefits submitted that it would be open to Twin Benefits to seek to challenge the claim to LPP on the basis of the improper purpose rule."
6.2 Textbooks
"19-01 Persons who grant a joint retainer to solicitors retain no confidence against one another; if they subsequently fall out and sue one another, neither can claim privilege against the other for documents generated in respect of the joint retainer. The trustee or successor stands in the shoes of the original party. Against the rest of the world, however, either can maintain a claim for privilege in respect of such documents. Because the privilege is joint it can be waived only jointly and not by one party alone…
19-05 Privilege may be claimed by a party or his successor in title. The death of a client does not destroy his privilege since it may be asserted by his heirs. A trustee in bankruptcy is not a successor in title for this purpose. The principle has been extended beyond the personal right: where it can be regarded as an incident of a property right, it may be asserted by a successor in title to that property."
In this connection, the learned author cites both Crescent Farm and Surface Technology. The specific point about a trustee in bankruptcy not being a successor in title is, of course, a reference to Shlosberg. The learned author notes that, in the light of this, Konigsberg is no longer to be regarded as good law "on this point". I consider that these paragraphs are an entirely accurate and useful summary of the law of JRP.
6.3 Winterthur
"Legal professional privilege is not a right to conduct and prosecute causes of action… nor, in my view, is it a right of access to documents or information that 'arises under or in connection with' the ATE policy."
He reiterated that at [134]. In addition, the only reference to JRP was at [133], where Aikens J said:
"Moreover, if legal professional privilege is held jointly, then it cannot be waived by one person alone. In my view that rule must apply equally to common interest privilege as much as to joint privilege where e.g. two parties jointly obtain advice from a lawyer."
6.4 Summary
(a) In respect of privileged documents, a successor in title stands in the shoes of his or her predecessor: see Schneider v Leigh and Crescent Farm. Thus, if the predecessor in title is entitled to the disclosure of privileged documents, so too is the successor in title.(b) The right of a successor in title to disclosure of such documents, and to assert privilege in such documents as against third parties, is not a matter of the terms of a particular assignment or deed. It is a right that passes as a matter of law: see Surface Technology and Winterthur.
(c) Of course, the scope of the rights of a successor in title will always depend on precisely what it is that has been passed on or assigned to him: see as far back as Minet, and the analysis in Surface Technology. Thus if a solicitor was jointly retained to deal with an IP claim and a fatal accidents claim, and the successor in title is an assignee of claims consequential upon the IP claim only, the successor in title is not entitled to see the privileged documents relating to the fatal accidents claim.
(d) Legal professional privilege is a fundamental right, as restated in clear terms by Sir Terence Etherton MR in Shlosberg. In a case of JRP, it is therefore a fundamental right of each party who has jointly retained the solicitors in question. There is no authority to suggest that one party's right to claim JRP might override the rights of the other party who jointly retained the solicitors, whilst Konigsberg states in unequivocal terms that one such party cannot assert privilege against the other.
(e) This can make for complexity, particularly in respect of what can be disclosed to third parties: see the discussion in Twin Benefits. But the general position is as set out there by Arnold J. Whilst neither party can claim privilege as against the other in respect of any documents created pursuant to the joint retainer, as against any third party (other than a successor in title, who stands in the shoes of the original party), both parties can maintain a claim for privilege in respect of any such documents.
(f) As the privilege is joint it can only be waived jointly and not unilaterally: see Winterthur and 19.01 of Documentary Evidence.
7. Are HJI Entitled To Disclosure In Principle?
8. Do The Particular Facts Make Any Difference?
8.1 The Terms of the Deed
(a) There was no assignment of the documents or the JRP by way of clause 1(i);(b) The documents were instead the subject of a simple contractual agreement at clause 1(ii);
(c) On a proper construction of that agreement, it was subject to Travelers' right to assert privilege, and therefore to object to the disclosure of the joint retainer file.
8.2 Other Background Facts
8.3 Summary
9. Particular Categories Of Documents Or Other Restrictions
10. Conclusions
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
LADY JUSTICE KING
Note 1 That echoed the traditional view that, in cases where the taking out of insurance was not a requirement of a defendant’s contractual or other legal obligations to the claimant, the terms of the defendant’s insurance policy were res inter alios acta or, as we now say, irrelevant. [Back] Note 2 An issue which did not feature in the application to strike out, but which I consider is likely to arise at trial, is the apparent tension between the Supreme Court’s decision that a s.51 costs order against Travelers was not appropriate because the disclosure of the insurance position was not a legal requirement, and the allegations against BLM and counsel to the effect that they were negligent from the outset in failing to advise that the insurance position should be disclosed. [Back] Note 3 Arnold LJ, as he now is, had previously been leading counsel inSurface Technology, and the judge at first instance, upheld by this court, inShlosberg. [Back]