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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Holyoake & Anor v Candy & Ors [2016] EWHC 2119 (Ch) (27 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/2119.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2119 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Judge of the High Court
In Private
____________________
(1) MARK ALAN HOLYOAKE | ||
(2) HOTBLACK HOLDINGS LIMITED | Claimants/Respondents | |
-v- | ||
(1) NICHOLAS ANTHONY CANDY | ||
(2) CHRISTIAN PETER CANDY | ||
(3) RICHARD STEVEN WILLIAMS | ||
(4) STEVEN MILES SMITH | ||
(5) TIMOTHY JAMES DEAN | ||
(6) CPC GROUP LIMITED | Defendants/Applicants |
____________________
Apple Transcription Limited
Suite 204, Kingfisher Business Centre, Burnley Road, Rawtenstall, Lancashire BB4 8ES
DX: 26258 Rawtenstall – Telephone: 0845 604 5642 – Fax: 01706 870838
MR RICHARD FOWLER
Instructed by Gunnercooke LLP
Counsel for the Defendants/Applicants: MR TOM ADAM QC and
MR ALEXANDER POLLEY
Instructed by Gowling WLG (UK) LLP
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HODGE QC:
(1) Fraudulent misrepresentation;(2) Duress;
(3) Actual undue influence;
(4) Intimidation;
(5) Extortion under cover of due process;
(6) Unlawful interference with business interests;
(7) Extortion simpliciter; and
(8) Blackmail.
(1) Fraudulent misrepresentation;(2) Duress;
(3) Actual undue influence;
(4) Intimidation;
(5) Extortion under cover of due process; and
(6) Unlawful interference with business interests.
Lastly, the claimants plead a further free-standing claim for relief under section 140A and 140B of the Consumer Credit Act 1974.
“"Apart from any concluded contract or estoppel, one party may be allowed to give evidence of what the other said or wrote in without prejudice negotiations if the exclusion of the evidence would act as a cloak for perjury, blackmail or other ‘'unambiguous impropriety’'... But this court has ... warned that the exception should be applied only in the clearest cases of abuse of a privileged occasion.”"
“"The Court of Appeal has warned that the exception should only be applied in the clearest cases of abuse of a privileged occasion. The boundary between over enthusiastic negotiation and unambiguous impropriety is a thin one.”"
“"There are in my judgment powerful policy reasons for admitting in evidence as exceptions to the without prejudice rule only the very clearest cases. Unless this highly beneficial rule is most scrupulously and jealously protected, it will all too readily become eroded. Not least requiring of rigorous scrutiny will be claims for admissibility of evidence advanced by those (such as the first defendant here) who have procured their evidence by clandestine methods and who are likely to have participated in discussions with half a mind at least to their litigious rather than settlement advantages. That distorted approach to negotiation to my mind is itself to be discouraged, militating, as inevitably it must, against the prospects of successful settlement.”"
“"56 ...In my judgment, the courts ought to treat it with considerable caution, for otherwise there is a danger of the exception to the rule displacing the rule by a process of begging the question. If the exception applies, then Mr Fincken is obliged to explain himself or face the consequences, for his admission is in the public domain. The absence of challenge may therefore be critical. If, however, the exception does not apply, then the admission is not in the public domain, the court ought not to know about it, and the absence of challenge is irrelevant. Moreover, there may be many reasons why someone in Mr Fincken’'s position may at the stage of SIB’'s application be cautious about responding to an issue (his ownership of the shares) which was not yet even part of the litigation. He is accused of perjury, but not on any formal charge and not on a matter even formally in issue. I can see that the absence of challenge may enable an applicant to establish more easily that an alleged admission is unequivocal. That, however, is not the same thing as an unequivocal or unambiguous impropriety. I would therefore be reluctant to find in the circumstances that an absence of challenge is a critical factor taking this case outside the philosophy of the jurisprudence expressed in the leading authorities cited above.
57 In my judgment that philosophy is antagonistic to treating an admission in without prejudice negotiations as tantamount to an impropriety unless the privilege is itself abused. That, it seems to me, is what Robert Walker LJ meant in the Unilever case when he repeatedly spoke in terms of the abuse of a privileged occasion, or of the abuse of the protection of the rule of privilege... That is why Hoffmann LJ in Forster v Friedland emphasised that it was the use of the privileged occasion to make a threat in the nature of blackmail that was, if unequivocally proved, unacceptable under the label of an unambiguous impropriety. And that is why Peter Gibson LJ in Berry Trade Ltd v Moussavi (No. 2) suggested, without having to decide, that talk of ‘'a cloak for perjury’' was itself intended to refer to a blackmailing threat of perjury, as in Greenwood v Fitts, rather than to an admission in itself. It is not the mere inconsistency between an admission and a pleaded case or a stated position, with the mere possibility that such a case or position, if persisted in, may lead to perjury, that loses the admitting party the protection of the privilege... It is the fact that the privilege is itself abused that does so. It is not an abuse of the privilege to tell the truth, even where the truth is contrary to one’'s case. That, after all, is what the without prejudice rule is all about, to encourage parties to speak frankly to one another in aid of reaching a settlement: and the public interest in that rule is very great and not to be sacrificed save in truly exceptional and needy circumstances.”"
“"...the critical question is whether the privileged occasion is itself abused. Although the test remains that of unambiguous impropriety, it may be easier to show that there is unambiguous impropriety where there is an improper threat than where there is simply an unambiguous admission of the truth. In either case, as Hoffmann LJ pointed out in Forster v Friedland (unrep) 10 November 1992:
‘'The rule is designed to encourage parties to express themselves freely and without inhibition. I think it is quite wrong for the tape-recorded words of a layman, who has used colourful or even exaggerated language, to be picked over in order to support an argument that he intends to raise defences which he does not really believe to be true’'.”"
“"The impropriety in the threat identified by [Mrs Justice Rose] was not concerned with what would happen if [the petitioner] accepted the increased offer: it was concerned with what would happen if he did not... What the judge understandably regarded as improper was the use of the threat of committal proceedings in the company’'s action to place increased pressure on [the petitioner] to pay [the respondents] personally more for the shares. [The respondents] were making it clear that, if the offer was not accepted, they would use their control of [the company] to take the steps identified in the email. Whilst those steps might be steps which it might be proper for [the company] to take if it had a genuine belief in some basis for them, it was wrong for them to be used as a lever to enable [the respondents] to get more for their shares.”"
“"The impropriety arises from the fact that the increase in price is tied, and tied only, to the threats affecting [the petitioner’'s] liberty, family and reputation. The impropriety does not depend on the quantum of the price increase. The redaction of the amount involved is an adequate means of protecting details of the negotiations. [The case was not one] of the type referred to by Hoffmann LJ, where there is a need to pick through many hours of recorded negotiations in order to make out a case of impropriety. The impropriety is apparent from the email itself, a single and carefully formulated document.”"
“"In the end, as Mr Hollander accepted, what is involved here is an evaluation of whether the threats unambiguously exceeded what was ‘'permissible in settlement of hard fought commercial litigation’'... In the absence of any error of principle by the judge I should be extremely cautious before coming to the conclusion that the judge’'s evaluation was wrong. However, I agree with the judge that the threats here did unambiguously exceed what was proper, essentially for the reasons she gave. Firstly, the threats went far beyond what was reasonable in pursuit of civil proceedings, by making the threat of criminal action, (not limited to civil contempt proceedings). Secondly, the threats were said to have serious implications for Jonathan’'s family because of Jonathan’'s wrongdoings. Thirdly, the threats were of immediate publicity being given to the allegations. It is nothing to the point in this connection that Warren and Stuart may have believed the allegations to be true. The threat to publicise allegations of extreme severity against Jonathan and his partner, and within such a short timescale, placed quite improper pressure on Jonathan. Fourthly, the purpose of the threats was to obtain for the brothers an immediate financial advantage arising out of circumstances which should accrue, if they had basis in fact, to the benefit of the company. Finally, there was no attempt to make any connection between the alleged wrong and the increased demand.”"
At paragraph 24, Lord Justice Floyd stated, in terms, that it was not necessary for the threats to fall within any formal legal definition of blackmail for them to be regarded as unambiguously improper. The defendants say that a parallel is to be drawn between Ferster v Ferster and the instant case: [REDACTED TEXT]
“"The ordinary blackmailer normally threatens to do what he has a perfect right to do – namely, communicate some compromising conduct to a person whose knowledge is likely to affect the person threatened. Often indeed he has not only the right but also the duty to make the disclosure, as of a felony, to the competent authorities. What he has to justify is not the threat, but the demand of money. The gravamen of the charge is the demand without reasonable or probable cause: and I cannot think that the mere fact that the threat is to do something a person is entitled to do either causes the threat not to be a ‘'menace’' within the Act or in itself provides a reasonable or probable cause for the demand.”"
(1) To amend their defence so as to plead these exchanges as evidence of the true nature of this claim;
(2) To inform the Court of Appeal about them at the forthcoming expedited hearing of the defendants’' appeal (in October) against a “"notification injunction”" granted by Mr Justice Nugee on 8th April and continued in modified form on 29th April;
(3) To inform the Court of Appeal about them in the event that the defendants are granted permission to appeal the finding of the Chancellor on 16th June that an insurance policy proffered by the claimants is sufficient fortification in accordance with Mr Justice Nugee’'s 29th April order; and
(4) To rely on these exchanges in support of their application (renewed on 15th July) for security for their costs of this litigation.
Mr Adam indicates that there may be other uses as well.
(1) The original statements did not challenge Mr Morrison’'s detailed evidence that Mr Browne was acting for Mr Holyoake in making these communications even though the possibility that he had not been so acting had been ventilated in correspondence at one point on what were said to be instructions from Mr Holyoake. That challenge has only just been made, in what are said to be bare and unsatisfactory terms, by a further witness statement from Mr Stringfellow served on 20th July;
(2) Those statements do not say anything at all about the threats by Mr Browne … [REDACTED TEXT] In fact, they do not so much as refer to those threats. There is said to be no attempt to defend them, or to suggest that they were not threats, or to suggest that Mr Browne’'s actions were proper. Instead, the evidence of the two solicitors is only (in summary) that they themselves did not perceive there to be any improper threat being made during the 14th June telephone discussions. It is said that the solicitors’' evidence has entirely ignored what preceded those discussions on 14th June. There is said to be no real attempt to engage with what is said to be the impropriety.
“"...was not, and has never been, an agent of Mr Holyoake with any general authority to act on his behalf (still less an agent with authority to make threats on his behalf).”"
(1) [REDACTED TEXT];(2) Mr Browne was able to set up a without prejudice meeting between Mr Holyoake, his solicitors and the defendants’' solicitors on 6th June;
(3) [REDACTED TEXT];
(4) [REDACTED TEXT];
(5) Mr Browne set up the without prejudice telephone call of 14th June;
(6) [REDACTED TEXT];
(7) [REDACTED TEXT]
(1) These threatened the defendants with … [REDACTED TEXT] They were designed to frighten the defendants into settlement in order to profit the claimants and to avoid them having to provide the £5 million in fortification which had just been ordered on an “"unless”" basis;(2) The evidence shows that Mr Browne was authorised to negotiate on behalf of the claimants despite what is said in Mr Stringfellow’'s twelfth witness statement. However, Mr Browne’'s authority to make these threats does not affect the outcome of the application;
(3) If Mr Browne was authorised by the claimants to make these threats, then they form part of a settlement negotiation but are not covered by without prejudice privilege because it does not exist to screen such conduct;
(4) If Mr Browne was not authorised to make them (on the basis that he was not Mr Holyoake’'s agent at all), then they were never covered by the privilege in the first place;
(5) The communications evidencing the threats made by Mr Browne on 9th June are therefore not covered by without prejudice privileged, whether authorised by Mr Holyoake or not, and may be pleaded and put in evidence.
(6) As for the communications with Mr Holyoake during the telephone call on 14th June, it is said that his words referenced the earlier threats by Mr Browne, of which he was obviously aware, and reinforced them. Properly understood therefore, they also are not covered by the privilege because they reiterated the same threats.
Those are the defendants’' submissions.
(1) Mr Morrison’'s first witness statement purports to describe what were, and were understood to be, without prejudice discussions, the purpose of which was to explore the possibly of settlement of the dispute between the parties;(2) Both the skeleton argument and the letter which formed the other elements of the disputed material make detailed reference to the same matters;
(3) The defendants have alleged that, in the context of those discussions, both Mr Holyoake and an alleged agent of his known as ‘'Paolo Browne’' made improper and unlawful threats which amounted to blackmail and, as a result, without prejudice privilege has been lost. However:
(a) No improper or unlawful threats were made and no blackmail was attempted. At no stage did the discussions cross the line from the proper commercial negotiations to be expected in a hard-fought and high-value piece of litigation to improper and unlawful conduct;(b) Further, Mr Browne was never the claimant’'s agent. He was never authorised by them to make any improper or unlawful threats or to attempt to blackmail the defendants and the defendants can never reasonably have supposed that he was; and(c) Accordingly, no circumstances have arisen in which the without prejudice privilege relating to the discussions could be said to have been lost or waived.(4) Accordingly, the defendants’' application should be dismissed;
(5) Further, the disputed materials, together with the evidence and skeleton arguments filed for the purposes of the application, should either be sealed in the court file and not be open to inspection, or removed from it and destroyed.
(1) Mr Browne was not their agent and was not authorised to make threats on behalf of their behalf. His only role was as an intermediary;(2) Further, the defendants cannot reasonably have thought otherwise. In particular, they cannot reasonably have thought that Mr Browne was the claimants’' agent, duly authorised, following the telephone conversation on 14th June when Mr Holyoake made it abundantly clear that he did not trust Mr Browne and was not sure whose side he was on and referred to him as an”" intermediary”"; and
(3) Yet further, the evidence adduced by the defendants of Mr Browne’'s purported threats is thin and very far from the unambiguous evidence of impropriety that is required before privilege is lost.
(1) The un-noted conversation at paragraph 11 of Mr Morrison’'s first witness statement on 9th June;(2) A photograph sent on 9th June by an intermediary, a Mr Johnstone, to Mr Morrison which purports to come from Mr Browne and appears to show… [REDACTED TEXT]; and
(3) A further message sent that same day by Mr Johnstone to Mr Morrison and purporting again to come from Mr Browne which refers to a meeting … [REDACTED TEXT] the next day but does not say who is to attend the meeting or to what purpose.
“"Mr Trace [leading counsel then appearing for the claimants] further says that it is clear that various matters relied upon by the relevant defendants before Mr Justice Nugee and, in particular, the deeds of the Regent’'s Park property owned by Mr Christian Candy and one or more of his companies, are designed to achieve some tax evasion and if there is tax evasion then Her Majesty’'s Revenue and Customs will be a competing creditor. I cannot see why this factor should in any way entitle the claimants to an upgrade in their injunctive relief.”"
“"I can confirm that I did not make reference during the telephone call on 14th June to the texts received from Mr Browne through James Johnstone. I considered that if I had mentioned them, the call would have come to an abrupt end and I did not see the sense in this. I do believe that Mr Holyoake’'s comments in the call were further veiled threats and gave weight to the threats which had been passed through Mr Browne earlier and indeed were a reference back to them.”"
(1) It is common ground that an agent cannot clothe himself with authority;(2) The only matters relied on by the defendants arise from the evidence of Mr Morrison which consists either:
(i) of statements made by Mr Browne himself which cannot assist; or(ii) of inferences to be drawn from the telephone discussions of 14th June.(3) No statement made during the telephone discussions of 14th June could have authorised or ratified a threat to which no reference was made by Mr Morrison;
(4) Searching through what was said at the 14th June discussion in any event infringes the purpose and rationale behind the without prejudice rule, particularly in circumstances where there was no hint of any kind of concern by Mr Morrison at Mr Browne’'s earlier behaviour and a deliberate decision made by Mr Morrison not to raise any such concerns;
(5) There is accordingly no basis upon which the court can properly conclude, let alone finally determine, that Mr Holyoake was party to any threats;
(6) If the court cannot finally determine that question, it cannot determine that there has been any unambiguous impropriety on the part of Mr Holyoake and there is therefore no basis for lifting the without prejudice veil.
(1) the case has not yet been tried;(2) it has attracted very significant publicity in the national press;
(3) the claimants have already had to apply for, and have obtained at short notice before Norris J on 28 July 2016, an injunction against The Times which had threatened to publish an article based on the defendants’' unsubstantiated allegations of blackmail and criminal activity, and notwithstanding that at the time it threatened to publish them the court’'s private judgment had already been handed down (on 27 July 2016) and The Times had been informed of the result of that private judgment;
(4) it is likely that a copy of the open judgment will also attract the attention of the national press;
(5) the material referred to by the defendants did not fall within any exception to without prejudice privilege, and is therefore inadmissible as evidence at trial (as the judgment finds), but is also confidential (see Toulson & Phipps on Confidentiality, at paragraph 17-015, as was relied upon by Norris J in granting the injunction against The Times); and
(6) the extent of the redactions proposed does not infringe the principle of open justice.