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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Solicitors Regulation Authority v Williams [2023] EWHC 2151 (Admin) (31 August 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/2151.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2151 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SOLICITORS REGULATION AUTHORITY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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EDWARD JAMES WILLIAMS |
Respondent |
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The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 13 July 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Julian Knowles:
Introduction
Background
Clients A, B and D
Clients J, K, L and M
"He paid it by faster payment as requested by EJW to a HSBC account … He paid it to our HSBC account on 16 January 2017."
The Rule 12 statement
The disciplinary hearing on 17-18 November 2022
"(9) The Tribunal may make a direction prohibiting the disclosure or publication of any matter likely to lead to the identification of any person whom the Tribunal considers should not be identified."
"138. In my judgment, the sweeping anonymity orders in respect of the third parties ought not to have been made. Courts and tribunals should not be squeamish about naming innocent people caught up in alleged wrongdoing of others. It is part of the price of open justice and there is no presumption that their privacy is more important than open justice."
"5. I have found this appeal difficult. It shows the problems we are experiencing in our justice system with the notion of open justice. We repeatedly stress its importance, yet increasingly undermine it by the creeping march of anonymity and redaction. Parties, witnesses and ordinary workers - for example, a case worker at the SRA in this case - are routinely anonymised without asking the court or giving the matter much thought.
6. A common misconception is that if the identity of a person in legal proceedings is not directly relevant, there is no public interest in that person's name being known. The justice system thrives on fearless naming of people, whether bit part players or a protagonist. Open reporting is discouraged by what George Orwell once called a "plague of initials"[1]. Clarity and a sense of purpose are lost. Reading or writing reports about nameless people is tedious."
"8.16 The Tribunal had regard to the submissions made by Mr Collis [counsel for the SRA] and to the comments made by Mr Justice Kerr in the case of Lu about the principles of open justice particularly in paragraphs 6 about the 'plague of initials' and in paragraph 138. The Tribunal understood Mr Collis to say that for the sake of convenience a considerable number of individuals, companies and properties had been anonymised when the Rule 12 Statement was drafted. They were then identified to the Tribunal by way of an anonymisation schedule attached to that Statement. None of these individuals or companies had contacted and/or given any commitment that they would be anonymised during the proceedings and in any judgment published following the proceedings. Mr Collis distinguished the need to do so as relating only to parties who had already been anonymised in a judgment handed down but faced the possibility of the anonymisation being lifted if an appeal against it succeeded in the High Court. Mr Collis applied for anonymisation to be maintained in respect of individuals and companies who were clients of Mr Williams based on an assertion of confidentiality for clients in respect of matters and dealings for which they had sought legal advice and assistance. As against this, the judgment of Mr Justice Kerr severely criticised the use of a multiplicity of initials in proceedings brought by regulators and in the judgments which resulted from them and also emphasised that courts and Tribunals should not be squeamish about naming innocent people (and by extension innocent companies) caught up in the alleged wrongdoing of others. He described it as being part of the price of open justice and made clear there is no presumption that their privacy is more important than open justice. While nowhere in the judgment did Mr Justice Kerr refer to the precise position of a solicitor's client whether an individual or entity, the Tribunal considered the judgement to be potentially broad in its application. It had been some months since the proceedings in this case had been issued and the SRA had not felt it necessary to approach any of the individuals or companies for comment. Furthermore paragraph 138 of the Lu judgment had been referred to during the 6 October 2022 CMH. Mr Collis had stated that the SRA was not aware of any particular sensitivities or vulnerabilities which needed to be protected by anonymisation. The Tribunal, while very conscious of the need for client confidentiality in the normal course of events could not detect any harm which might result to any of the individual or company clients referred to in the Rule 12 Statement and it therefore determined that this was not a case under Rule 35(9) of the SDPR of exceptional hardship or exceptional prejudice such that anonymisation should be applied. The Tribunal therefore saw no reason to depart from the principle set out by Mr Justice Kerr that 'Courts and Tribunals should not be squeamish about naming innocent people caught up in alleged wrongdoing of others …' and his observation set out in paragraph 6 of the judgment. It refused Mr Collis's application in respect of Mr Williams's clients. However the Tribunal did not think it was necessary to identify the property numbers involved in the transactions the subject of the allegations which could be residential addresses of clients."
Legal framework for appeals from the SDT
"(3) The appeal court will allow an appeal where the decision of the lower court was -
(a) wrong; or
(b) unjust because of a serious procedural or other irregularity in the proceedings in the lower court.
…
(4) The appeal court may draw any inference of fact which it considers justified on the evidence."
The SRA's grounds of appeal
"The object and meaning of the rule [on LPPl] is this: that as, by reason of the complexity and difficulty of our law, litigation can only be properly conducted by professional men, it is absolutely necessary that a man, in order to prosecute his rights or to defend himself from an improper claim, should have recourse to the assistance of professional lawyers, and it being so absolutely necessary, it is equally necessary, to use a vulgar phrase, that he should be able to make a clean breast of it to the gentleman whom he consults with a view to the prosecution of his claim, or the substantiating his defence against the claim of others; that he should be able to place unrestricted and unbounded confidence in the professional agent, and that the communications he so makes to him should be kept secret, unless with his consent (for it is his privilege, and not the privilege of the confidential agent), that he should be enabled properly to conduct his litigation. That is the meaning of the rule."\
"A man must be able to consult his lawyer in confidence, since otherwise he might hold back half the truth. The client must be sure that what he tells his lawyer in confidence will never be revealed without his consent. Legal professional privilege is thus much more than an ordinary rule of evidence, limited in its application to the facts of a particular case. It is a fundamental condition on which the administration of justice as a whole rests".
"As indicated, whether such documents are privileged or not must depend on whether they are part of that necessary exchange of information of which the object is the giving of legal advice as and when appropriate. Accordingly, I agree with the formulation made by Master Munrow in the present case, subject to the additional words which I have placed in brackets. He said:
"Once solicitors are embarked on a conveyancing transaction they are employed to ensure that the client steers clear of legal difficulties, and communications passing in the handling of that transaction are privileged (if their aim is the obtaining of appropriate legal advice) since the whole handling is experience and legal skill in action and a document uttered during the transaction does not have to incorporate a specific piece of legal advice to obtain that privilege."
"(i) The principle of open justice demands that the public are entitled to attend court proceedings to see what is going on - to hold the judges to account for the decisions they make and to enable the public to have confidence that they are doing their job properly: AG v Leveller per Lord Diplock at p.450; Al Rawi per Lord Dyson at [11]; Guardian Newspapers and Media Ltd per Toulson LJ at [1].
(ii) The evidence and argument before the court should be made public so that the public can understand the issues for determination, the evidence and legal arguments on those issues, the procedural rules applied and the basis on which the court reaches its decision: AG v Leveller per Lord Diplock at p.450.
(iii) The media should be permitted to report court proceedings to the public, in furtherance of the principle of open justice and to facilitate exercise of their right to freedom of expression: AG v Leveller per Lord Diplock at p.450; R v Shayler per Lord Bingham at [21]
(iv) The fact that a hearing in open court may be uncomfortable or humiliating to a party or witness is not normally a proper basis for departing from the open justice principle.
(v) Any departure from the principle of open justice must be justified and will be permitted only where it is necessary in the interests of justice and the administration of justice: Guardian Newspapers and Media Ltd per Toulson LJ at [4]; McKillen per Richards J [32]-[34]."
"1. This appeal by the appellant (Ms Lu) is from a decision of the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (the tribunal) published on 26 February 2021, in disciplinary proceedings brought by the respondent (the SRA) against Ms Lu. Ms Lu was acquitted of any misconduct. The appeal concerns the tribunal's approach to open justice and to the anonymity of persons mentioned in the tribunal's decision and relevant to the allegations it had to determine.
2. The tribunal agreed to sit in private and decided to anonymise two complainant firms of solicitors, relevant individuals employed by them and, for some reason, a barrister and an expert witness whose roles were not particularly controversial. The tribunal so decided of its own accord, without any application from those concerned. However, the tribunal refused to agree to Ms Lu's request that her identity be withheld from the public domain.
3. At the hearing before me, held in public, with some misgivings I gave a temporary direction preserving the status quo and prohibiting publication of Ms Lu's name and that of the two firms, their relevant employees and the barrister. Before the draft of this judgment was made final, the two firms and four individuals were able to (and most did) make representations as to whether their anonymity should be preserved in this judgment. Ms Lu's should not be.
4. I am prepared, not without hesitation, to continue the anonymity of three relevant individuals within the two complainant firms. This is because they are likely, as against their employer, to have a contractual right to anonymity in respect of allegations made by or against them internally within the context of their employment; albeit that contractual right is far from conclusive, does not bind the court and might well have to yield to open justice.
…
37. Ms Lu's arguments centred on protecting her identity as a complainant alleging sexual harassment, included among her grievance allegations. She argued that the identity of those complaining of sexual harassment is always protected by the courts. She also relied on medical evidence to support her contention that her health and mental state would be endangered if her identity became known.
38. It appears from paragraph 56 (and following) of the 'anonymised and unredacted' version of the tribunal's subsequent judgment that the chairman picked up on Mr Johal's references to probable allegations of sexual harassment against individuals who would not be giving evidence. The chairman wished to protect 'persons who were not present to defend themselves'.
39. Rule 35(5) of the SDPR, read with rule 35(2), does indeed provide for a tribunal to sit in private for all or part of a hearing, even without an application from a person affected, provided such a person would suffer 'exceptional hardship' or 'exceptional prejudice'; and provided the tribunal 'considers that a hearing in public would prejudice the interests of justice' (rule 35(5)(b))."
"35. (1) Subject to paragraphs (2), (4), (5) and (6), every hearing of the Tribunal must take place in public.
(2) Any person who claims to be affected by an application may apply to the Tribunal for the hearing of the application to be conducted in private on the grounds of -
(a) exceptional hardship; or
(b) exceptional prejudice
to a party, a witness or any person affected by the hearing."
Discussion
"(2) … a witness summons could not be issued under section 97 of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1980 to compel the production of documents subject to legal professional privilege which had not been waived, since the principle that a client should be free to consult his legal advisers without fear of his communications being revealed was a fundamental condition on which the administration of justice as a whole rested; that notwithstanding the public interest in securing that all relevant evidence was made available to the defence, legal professional privilege was to be upheld in all cases as the predominant public interest, even (Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead dubitante) where the witness no longer had any recognisable interest in preserving the confidentiality; and that, accordingly, the applicant had been entitled to claim legal professional privilege."
"Mr Richards, as amicus curiae, acknowledged the importance of maintaining legal professional privilege as the general rule. But he submitted that the rule should not be absolute. There might be occasions, if only by way of rare exception, in which the rule should yield to some other consideration of even greater importance. He referred by analogy to the balancing exercise which is called for where documents are withheld on the ground of public interest immunity, and cited the speech of Lord Simon of Glaisdale in D v National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children [1978] AC 171, 233, and in Waugh v. British Railways Board [1980] AC 521, 535. But the drawback to that approach is that once any exception to the general rule is allowed, the client's confidence is necessarily lost. The solicitor, instead of being able to tell his client that anything which the client might say would never in any circumstances be revealed without his consent, would have to qualify his assurance. He would have to tell the client that his confidence might be broken if in some future case the court were to hold that he no longer had 'any recognisable interest' in asserting his privilege. One can see at once that the purpose of the privilege would thereby be undermined.
As for the analogy with public interest immunity, I accept that the various classes of case in which relevant evidence is excluded may, as Lord Simon of Glaisdale suggested, be regarded as forming part of a continuous spectrum. But it by no means follows that because a balancing exercise is called for in one class of case, it may also be allowed in another. Legal professional privilege and public interest immunity are as different in their origin as they are in their scope. Putting it another way, if a balancing exercise was ever required in the case of legal professional privilege, it was performed once and for all in the 16th century, and since then has applied across the board in every case, irrespective of the client's individual merits.
In the course of his judgment in the Divisional Court, McCowan LJ indicated that he not only felt bound by Reg v Ataou [1988] QB 798, but he also agreed with it. He continued:
"These further points were made by Mr. Francis. He says that if a man charged with a criminal offence cannot go to a solicitor in the certainty that such matters as he places before him will be kept private for all time, he may be reluctant to be candid with his solicitors. Surely, however, it ought to be an incentive to him to tell the truth to his solicitors, which surely cannot be a bad thing. Mr. Francis went on to suggest that his client's reputation would be damaged if the disclosures were to go to suggest that he was the murderer. For my part, I would be able to bear with equanimity that damage to his reputation. In the interests of justice and of the respondent, it would be a good thing that that reputation should be so damaged."
One can have much sympathy with McCowan LJ's approach, especially in relation to the unusual facts of this case. But it is not for the sake of the applicant alone that the privilege must be upheld. It is in the wider interests of all those hereafter who might otherwise be deterred from telling the whole truth to their solicitors. For this reason I am of the opinion that no exception should be allowed to the absolute nature of legal professional privilege, once established. It follows that Reg. v Barton [1973] 1 WLR 115 and Reg v Ataou [1988] QB 798 were wrongly decided, and ought to be overruled. I therefore considered these appeals should be allowed on both grounds and the case remitted to the High Court, with a direction that the decisions of the stipendiary magistrate and the justice of the peace dated 21 June and 8 August 1994 be quashed."