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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 >> Brent London Borough Council v Davies & Ors [2018] EWHC 2214 (Ch) (16 August 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/2214.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 2214 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Between :
____________________
BRENT LONDON BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) ALAN DAVIES (2) DR RICHARD EVANS (3) COLUMBUS UDOKORO (4) MICHELE MCKENZIE (FORMERLY BISHOP) (5) DR INDRAVADAN PATEL (6) MARTIN DAY |
Defendants |
____________________
Nigel Hood (direct access Counsel) for the First Defendant
Ian Clarke QC, Vivienne Tanchel (instructed by Hughmans) for the Second Defendant
Anthony Speaight QC (instructed by Lock & Marlborough) for the Third Defendant
The Fourth Defendant in person
Iain Pester (instructed by SCA Ontier LLP) for the Fifth and Sixth Defendants
Hearing dates: 6th, 7th, 9th, 12th-16th, 19th -23rd, 26th-28th February, 1st, 2nd, 5th-9th, 12th-15th March, and 16th-20th April 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
A. Introduction | 1-29 | |
B. The Witnesses | 30-60 | |
C. The Overpayments | 61-79 | |
D. Findings on the key issues | 80 | |
D(1) Were the payments unlawful per se? | 81-130 | |
D(2) Were the payments properly authorised? | 131-180 | |
D(3) The state of knowledge of the GB as to the overpayments | 181-194 | |
D(4) The state of knowledge, as to the overpayments recorded in PRC presentation documents, of the PRC members who are not accused of wrongdoing | 195-207 | |
D(5) The state of knowledge, as to the overpayments made via the ad hoc procedure, of the PRC members who are not accused of wrongdoing | 208-281 | |
E. Conspiracy to injure by unlawful means | 282-325 | |
F. Breach of Fiduciary Duties | 326 | |
F(1) The law relating to fiduciary duties | 326-334 | |
F(2) Fiduciary duties: the circumstances of this case | 335-352 | |
F(3) Whether each of the Defendants owed fiduciary duties | 353-369 | |
F(4) The content of the fiduciary duties | 370-377 | |
F(5) Did the 1st, 5th and 6th Defendants breach their fiduciary duties? | 378 | |
F(5)(i) Mr Davies | 379-482 | |
F(5)(ii) Dr Patel and Mr Day | 483-540 | |
F(6) Defence under s.50(7) of School Standards and Framework Act 1998 | 541-544 | |
F(7) Limitation and breach of fiduciary duty | 545-555 | |
G. Knowing Receipt | 556-568 | |
G(1) Limitation and knowing receipt | 569-577 | |
G(2) Knowing receipt and Dr Evans | 578-599 | |
G(3) Knowing receipt and Mr Udokoro | 600-634 | |
G(4) Knowing receipt and Ms McKenzie | 635-643 | |
H. Misfeasance in Public Office | 644 | |
H(1) Public Officer | 645-665 | |
H(2) The mental element | 666-669 | |
H(3) Damages | 670-684 | |
H(4) Limitation | 685-692 | |
I. Counterclaim by Mr Davies | 693-695 | |
J. Conclusion | 696-705 |
Mr Justice Zacaroli:
A. Introduction
The new school development
B. The Witnesses
"Speaking from my own experience, I have found it essential in cases of fraud, when considering the credibility of witnesses, always to test their veracity by reference to the independent facts proved independently of their testimony, in particular by reference to the documents in the case, and also to pay particular regard to their motives and to the overall probabilities. It is frequently very difficult to tell whether a witness is telling the truth or not; and where there is a conflict of evidence such as there was in the present case, reference to the objective facts and documents, to the witnesses' motives, and to the overall probabilities, can be of very great assistance to a judge in ascertaining the truth."
Transcripts of interviews with Mr Udokoro in September 2009
Other key individuals
Standard of proof
Missing documents
C. The Overpayments
D. Findings on key issues
D(1) Were the overpayments unlawful per se?
School Governance
The School's finances
" the governing body may spend any such amounts as they think fit for: (a) any purposes of the school; or (b) (subject also to any prescribed conditions) for such purposes as may be prescribed."
"Any amount made available by a local authority to the governing body of a maintained school whether under section 50 or otherwise (a) shall remain the property of the authority until spent by the governing body or the headteacher; and (b) when spent by the governing body or the headteacher, shall be taken to be spent by them or him as the authority's agent."
"Head teachers are responsible for ensuring that all expenditure under their control is incurred for purposes which the Council is legally empowered to pursue. All headteachers need to ensure that they only incur expenditure which is properly justified as being in the interest of the Council."
"Head teachers are responsible for ensuring that only authorised payments are made "
Statutory provisions relating to teachers' pay
"shall have effect for the purposes of determining (a) the remuneration of school teachers, and (b) other conditions of employment of school teachers which relate to their professional duties and working time."
"The relevant body may determine the individual school range in accordance with sub-paragraph 2.6 of this paragraph where: (a) the school is a school causing concern; (b) if the maximum of the individual school range did not exceed the maximum of the head teacher group range, the relevant body consider that the school would have substantial difficulty filling the vacant headteacher post; or (c) if the maximum of the individual school range did not exceed the maximum of the head teacher group range, the relevant body consider the school would have substantial difficulty retaining the existing head teacher."
"the relevant body may make such payments as they see fit to a teacher, including a head teacher, in respect of: (a) continuing professional development undertaken outside the school day; (b) activities relating to the provision of initial teacher training as part of the ordinary conduct of the school; (c) participation in out-of-school hours learning activity agreed between the teacher and the head-teacher or, in the case of the head teacher, between the head teacher and the relevant body"
"No payments or conditions of employment other than those provided for in the Document may be applied to teachers, except those conditions which are always determined locally and which do not conflict with the Document, unless the Secretary of State has granted exemptions under other legislation."
The school's pay policies
"The governing body recognises that it is bound by the terms of the LEA advice and guidance on school pay policy and other staffing matters and appropriate policies in other schools of the LEA. The policy is based on a "whole school" approach to pay issues, with pay decisions taken in the context of full consideration of the resources available to the school. This means that pay decisions relating to any given group of staff will not be taken in isolation and that all pay decisions will be taken in the context of the school as a whole the governing body will use the School Development Plan as the starting point for its consideration of school pay issues the governing body will exercise its discretion using fair, transparent and objective criteria in order to secure consistency in school pay decisions and will not make selective use of its discretionary powers in relation to teachers' pay."
"the governing body reserves the right to make payments in response to local recruitment and retention difficulties, in the light of the limits set out in the Pay and Conditions Document. The governing body recognises that such payments may be necessary due to the absence of a pay structure for teachers which fully supports recruitment and retention without recourse to discretionary payments. Any use of such payments will be on the basis of clearly defined criteria determined by the governing body from time to time and applied on a non-discriminatory basis. The level of such payments will be increased annually at least to take account of inflation and pay awards. Where teachers were in receipt of bonus allowances before 1 April 2004, the governing body will continue to make payments which will be increased annually at least to take account of inflation and pay awards."
Non-teaching staff
Conclusions
D(2) Were the payments properly authorised?
Delegation to the PRC?
Delegation in respect of the ad hoc procedure?
(i) December 2004 to July 2005
(ii) July 2005 to July 2007
(iii) July 2007 to February 2008
"Dr Evans reported that the pay review meeting would be deferred to next term as we did not have all the figures required. He asked that the governors approve for the Pay Review Committee be delegated authority in order to make decisions relating to pay and that the Chair and Vice Chair of Governors be delegated the same powers in consultation with the headteacher. This was agreed unanimously."
(1) The PRC presentation document dated 2008 stated, at paragraph 2.0: "we wish to delegate authority from this committee, to the Chair and Vice-Chair of the Finance Committee and the Governing Body in order to make ad hoc payments to staff. This will be carried out in conjunction with the Head Teacher."
(2) A manuscript amendment in Mr Davies' writing at the end of the document stated: "The committee allocated £39,000 to be used for rewarding staff as appropriate by the Headteacher and Deputy Head."
(3) A separate memo from Dr Patel to Mr Davies headed "Pay Review 2008: New School Development/Sharing in Success Supplement" states "I was asked in consultation with yourself and my deputy to allocate additional discretionary payments " and sets out a series of payments which total £39,000.
(4) Item (4) of the minutes of the meeting of 8 February 2008 states: "The Headteacher and Chair of Governors were authorised to make additional payments of under £40,000 as deemed appropriate."
(iv) February 2008 onwards
D(3) The state of knowledge of the GB as to the overpayments
D(4) The state of knowledge of the PRC members who are not accused of wrongdoing, as to the overpayments recorded in the PRC presentation documents.
(1) The minutes of the GB meeting dated 5 December 2007 record Mrs Davidson reporting that the PRC had not met during 2007 and Dr Evans confirming that the PRC convened during the financial year, not the academic year, and that governors should call a meeting soon.
(2) The agenda for the meeting noted that it was to take place at 4pm on Friday 8 February 2008 and the circulation list included Mrs Davidson.
(3) The minutes of the GB meeting of 26 March 2008 record that "[the PRC] meeting took place this term and recommendations made to which the committee agreed. Dr Patel asked if the recommendations had been enforced, to which Sir Alan reported that they had." Mrs Davidson is reported as being present at the GB meeting. The minutes are signed by Dr Patel, and his signature is dated 2 July 2008. The minutes of the GB meeting held on 2 July 2008 (at which Mrs Davidson was also recorded as being present) record that the minutes of the meeting held on 26 March 2008 were accepted as a true and accurate record of the meeting. The minutes of the July GB meeting do not record any objection being made by Mrs Davidson.
(4) Mr Roberts, having heard of the rumours concerning large bonuses to the senior leadership team from about 2005, finally took steps in late 2008 to investigate whether in fact substantial bonuses were being paid and, in early 2009, he received at least some evidence of this from Mrs Goldie and Mrs Davidson. Importantly he said that he had a conversation or conversations with Mrs Davidson around this time in which she had told him that she was aware of a bonus to one individual in the sum of £80,000. That evidence is corroborated by the fact that in the first dossier produced by Mr Roberts in April 2009, blowing the whistle on the bonus culture in the school, he wrote "I also have had confidential discussions with long-standing Governors who have alleged an entrenched bonus culture leading to last year an £80,000 annual bonus to the Headteacher ". This is important because it suggests that Mrs Davidson - one of only two members of the PRC in 2008 and 2009 who is not implicated in the allegations of wrongdoing - knew both of the bonus of £70,000 awarded to Mr Davies at the PRC meeting in February 2008 and the fact that the bonus was increased to £80,000 shortly afterwards. No explanation has been offered for how she would have known this, apart from her presence at the PRC meetings in February 2008 and January 2009.
D(5) The knowledge of the PRC members who are not accused of wrongdoing, as to the overpayments made via the ad hoc procedure.
Role of the Defendants in the ad hoc procedure
Whether the ad hoc payments were revealed to the PRC
(1) Paragraph 1.0 of the PRC presentation document dated February 2008 states "we wish to confirm the previous recommendation not just for replacing Mr Ali and taking on his duties, but now for also taking on the extra work relating to the "New School Development" which in fact you have done since 2001 as approved by the Chair and Vice-Chair of Finance in June 2007, for the next financial year. This, recommendation, signed by the Chair and Vice-Chair is in addition to the following recommendations."
(2) The minutes of the meeting of that PRC meeting then state, at item (3): "The committee approved that the Headteacher and Deputy Head teacher Finance should continue with their salary enhancements of £4,500 per month and £2,000 per month respectively for their significant workload and additional responsibilities."
(3) At item (5) of the same minutes, it is stated that "the Chair thanks Sir Alan, Dr Evans and their team for work in the new school development and that the awards which commenced in September 2007 should be continued."
(4) The minutes of the PRC meeting on 19 January 2009 state, at item (3): "The Headteacher and Dr Evans are to maintain the increase of £4,500 per month and £2,000 per month respectively for additional responsibilities as approved at the last Pay Review Committee Meeting. Confirming their salaries as L43 + £4,500pm and L37 + £2,000pm to assimilate if possible."
(5) Item (5) of the 2009 minutes stated: "Once again Dr IP Patel and the committee thanked Sir Alan & his team for their hard work in driving the development forward, but concern was expressed relating to the credit crunch. Dr IP Patel will contact Sir Alan re the continued New School Development Payments." In a letter to Mr Davies dated 25 February 2009 (the same date that Dr Patel signed the minutes of the PRC meeting) Dr Patel informed Mr Davies that "we are no longer able to pay the team for leading on the new school development from 1st April 2009. I know that you will understand."
February 2008 PRC meeting
(1) One-off payments relating to taking on Mr Ali's work totalling £50,000;
(2) One-off payments relating to work on the NSD (in May and October 2007) totalling £75,000; and
(3) An increase of £72,000 per year on his salary specifically for his work on the NSD, meaning that in addition to his basic salary (at that time, £104,528 p.a.) Mr Davies was receiving an additional £126,000 p.a. (£108,000 p.a. relating to the NSD and £18,000 p.a. relating to covering Mr Ali's work)
PRC Meeting of July 2006
July 2005 PRC meeting
Conclusion
(1) The PRC was not informed of any of the payments made pursuant to the ad hoc memos until February 2008 (and then again in January 2009).
(2) It was then told only of the salary enhancements to Mr Davies and Dr Evans that resulted from the first Ali Memo, the first NSD Memo and the fifth NSD Memo.
(3) It was misled, however, when asked to approve the payments pursuant to the fifth NSD Memo, because it was not informed that Mr Davies and Dr Evans were already receiving (when awarded the salary enhancements of £6,000 and £4,000 respectively) £3,000 and £2,000 per month for their work relating to the NSD.
E. Conspiracy to injure by unlawful means
A combination
(1) Writing the documentation pursuant to which the overpayments were recommended, in the knowledge that they were unauthorised, unlawful and unjustified, and where the justifications/statements around affordability in the document were false (Mr Davies, with input from Dr Evans);
(2) Determining the quantum of the overpayments (Mr Davies and Dr Evans);
(3) Deciding who should receive the overpayments (Mr Davies and Dr Evans);
(4) Paying the overpayments through the School's payroll, knowing they were unauthorised, unlawful and unjustified (Mr Davies, Mr Udokoro and Ms McKenzie);
(5) Advising the PRC that the overpayments were lawful and permitted under the School's policies (Mr Davies and Dr Evans);
(6) Creating and utilising the 'twin track' process i.e. the ad hoc memo procedure including failing to inform the PRC (Mr Davies, Dr Evans, Dr Patel and Mr Day);
(7) Manipulating the composition and procedures of the GB to reduce the level of transparency so as to conceal the overpayments (Mr Davies, Dr Evans, Mr Udokoro, Dr Patel and Mr Day);
(8) Failing to disclose the overpayments at meetings of the GB and the FMC (Mr Davies, Dr Evans, Mr Udokoro, Dr Patel and Mr Day);
(9) Underreporting salary on remuneration returns to, and in response to queries from, the Claimant (Mr Davies and Mr Udokoro);
(10) Misrepresenting the situation regarding the overpayments once the Claimant began to investigate (all Defendants).
(1) As to the contention that the Defendants conspired to pack the GB with supporters of Dr Patel and Mr Davies, I find that the decisions as to the composition of the GB were made by the GB as a whole, and not pursuant to any agreement between the Defendants.
(2) Similarly, the decision taken by the GB that led to Mrs Rashid's removal from the PRC (namely the decision that paid employees could not sit on the PRC) was put to a vote of the GB and was opposed by only three governors. Her removal from the PRC is, any event, of little relevance in circumstances where Mrs Davidson remained on the PRC throughout.
(3) The decision to reduce the number of GB meetings was, again, taken by the GB as a whole. I reject the contention that it was part of a plan by Dr Patel, Mr Day and others to reduce transparency. Payments to individual teachers had, for a long period prior to the start of the alleged conspiracy, been kept confidential from governors.
(4) For the same reason, I reject the contention that the reason the overpayments were not revealed to the GB was due to the actions and/or agreement between the Defendants.
(5) I reject the contention that Mrs Goldie was removed from her position in the finance department in order to manoeuvre Ms McKenzie into position with a view to joining the conspiracy to make unlawful payments. It was clear from Ms Goldie's evidence that she wished to move out of her post and that to the extent that her witness statement hinted at a conspiracy to get her out, she could not support that in her oral evidence.
(6) I also reject the contention that the 'bonus culture' in the school was developed as part of a plan to enable the overpayments to be made. As I have described at section D(3) above, the concept of paying bonuses in order to incentivise staff was accepted throughout the GB before the alleged conspiracy commenced, as explained by Mr Deshmukh.
(7) I reject the allegation that Mr Davies and/or Dr Evans expressly advised the PRC, the FMC or Dr Patel and Mr Day that the payments being recommended were lawful and in accordance with the STPCD. Although Dr Patel suggested that this happened, I regard this as inherently unlikely. It is far more likely and consistent with the way in which a bonus culture had evolved over time within the school that neither Dr Patel nor Mr Day gave any thought to the legality of the payments. Given that it is the job of the GB to ensure compliance with the law, that there was a professionally qualified clerk to the governors, and that they knew that neither Mr Davies nor Dr Evans were legally qualified, it is unlikely that they would have sought specific assurance on questions of legality from Mr Davies or Dr Evans.
(8) Finally, I reject the allegation that it can be inferred that Ms McKenzie was a party to a combination to make unlawful payments because she was involved in a personal relationship with Mr Davies. Indeed, the existence of such a relationship is more consistent with the conclusion that the payments made to her were improper on the basis of favouritism by Mr Davies, rather than in order to buy her silence (which is the allegation necessary to support the conspiracy claim).
F. Breach of fiduciary duty
F(1) The law relating to fiduciary duties
"Identifying the kind of circumstances that produce that result is difficult. The decisions of the courts have sought to retain flexibility as to the approach to be adopted. Numerous academic commentators have offered suggestions, but none has gathered universal support. There is said to be growing judicial support for the following two propositions:
(1) a fiduciary is someone who has undertaken to act for or on behalf of another in a particular matter in circumstances which give rise to a relationship of trust and confidence;
(2) the concept encaptures a situation where one person is in a relationship with another which gives rise to a legitimate expectation, which equity will recognise, that the fiduciary will not utilise his or her position in such a way which is adverse to the interests of the principal."
"That contractual and fiduciary relationships may co-exist between the same parties has never been doubted. Indeed, the existence of a basic contractual relationship has in many situations provided a foundation for the erection of a fiduciary relationship. In these situations it is the contractual foundation which is all important because it is the contract that regulates the basic rights and liabilities of the parties. The fiduciary relationship, if it is to exist at all, must accommodate itself to the terms of the contract so that it is consistent with, and conforms to, them. The fiduciary relationship cannot be superimposed upon the contract in such a way as to alter the operation which the contract was intended to have according to its true construction."
F(2) Fiduciary duties: the circumstances of this case
"There is no doubt that this line of authority establishes that some decisions of local authorities will amount to a breach of fiduciary duty or of a duty analogous to a fiduciary duty and that, in the public law proceedings at the suit of an interested party, the decision may be characterised as ultra vires and void."
"provides that, in spending its delegated budget, the governors and heads of a maintained school are ordinarily deemed to be acting on behalf of the LEA. That is to say, they are in law acting as agents, not as principals. That is not intended to change the law. It frankly reflects what the department has always understood to be the legal position. However, for the avoidance of doubt, it seemed advisable to put this express provision in the Bill. One reason for that is that it removes any doubt as to whether VAT can properly be reclaimed by LEAs under section 33 of the VAT Act in respect of purchases made by schools from their delegated budgets and other funds provided by the LEA. The present amendments reflect discussions with Customs and Excise."
F(3) Whether each of the Defendants owed fiduciary duties
Dr Patel and Mr Day
Mr Davies
F(4) The content of the fiduciary duties
"The expression "fiduciary duty" is properly confined to those duties which are peculiar to fiduciaries and the breach of which attracts legal consequences differing from those consequent upon the breach of other duties. Unless the expression is so limited it is lacking in practical utility. In this sense it is obvious that not every breach of duty by a fiduciary is a breach of fiduciary duty."
"This leaves those duties which are special to fiduciaries and which attract those remedies which are peculiar to the equitable jurisdiction and are primarily restitutionary or restorative rather than compensatory. A fiduciary is someone who has undertaken to act for or on behalf of another in a particular matter in circumstances which give rise to a relationship of trust and confidence. The distinguishing obligation of a fiduciary is the obligation of loyalty. The principal is entitled to the single-minded loyalty of his fiduciary. This core liability has several facets. A fiduciary must act in good faith; he must not make a profit out of his trust; he must not place himself in a position where his duty and his interest may conflict; he may not act for his own benefit or the benefit of a third person without the informed consent of his principal. This is not intended to be an exhaustive list, but it is sufficient to indicate the nature of fiduciary obligations. They are the defining characteristics of the fiduciary. As Dr. Finn pointed out in his classic work Fiduciary Obligations (1977), p.2, he is not subject to fiduciary obligations because he is a fiduciary; it is because he is subject to them that he is a fiduciary."
F(5) Did Mr Davies and/or Dr Patel and Mr Day breach their fiduciary duties in connection with the overpayments authorised through the ad hoc process?
F(5)(i) Mr Davies
First Ali Memo
First NSD Memo
The remaining ad hoc memos
(1) The misleading contents of the second to seventh Ali Memos;
(2) The double-counting of additional responsibilities;
(3) The double-counting in respect of bonuses;
(4) The drafting and terminology of the memos themselves.
(1) The misleading contents of the second to seventh Ali Memos.
(2) The double-counting of additional responsibilities
(3) Double-counting in respect of bonuses
(4) The drafting and terminology of the memos
Conclusions in respect of Mr Davies
Payments to which this conclusion applies
(1) Ms McKenzie, for example, received a salary increase of approximately £6,000 per year in October 2005, based on her work in relation to the payroll system, notwithstanding that earlier that same year she had already received £5,000 for the same thing pursuant to the second Ali Memo, and a salary increase of £2,500 per year.
(2) Mr Udokoro had received a pay rise of approximately £18,000 per year in August 2003 to recognise his enhanced roles in finance and legal matters.
(3) They were both paid substantial amounts by way of overtime, in addition to the payments they received for attending Saturday school and booster classes. The one-off payments pursuant to the ad hoc memos were in many cases clear duplication of such overtime.
(4) For example, in each of the first four months of 2007, they had both received additional payments of approximately £5,000 per month (Mr Udokoro) and £4,000 per month (Ms McKenzie). The most likely explanation for the payments in March and April is that they were in response to overtime claims. There is in evidence a document bearing the date "3/6/2007" which claims overtime for work done between January and April 2007. It appears, from its contents, that the date is either wrong or written in the American style (i.e. 6 March): the text in the document made it clear that the claim was being made partly in respect of hours actually done, and partly as "projection of work to be done". Each of them claimed for 232 hours of overtime. The fact that it was partly a projection explains the otherwise impossible co-incidence that each of them was claiming for exactly the same number of hours worked. In order to have justified these payments, they must have worked every spare hour of the week on school matters.
(5) In those circumstances, it is impossible to see how there was any time left to them in which they could have undertaken the "extra duties" on the NSD for which they received further payments of £10,000 and £8,000 respectively in May 2007 (pursuant to the fourth NSD Memo).
(6) This was immediately followed by a pay rise of £20,000 per year and £15,000 per year respectively pursuant to the memo dated 23 June 2007. The memo referred to the need to take on additional staff as discussed at the last FMC meeting, but there is no evidence of such a discussion in either the June or March FMC meeting minutes. Having identified the need for more staff it then suggested that Mr Davies may choose to "stay with the present (team) staffing structure" and allocate additional pay to Mr Udokoro and Ms McKenzie. If the need was for more staff, then paying existing staff more hardly met that need. Notwithstanding that pay rise, each of them continued to receive very large sums as reward for taking on additional duties: £10,000/£8,000 (Udokoro/McKenzie) pursuant to the sixth NSD Memo in October 2007; £16,000/£15,000 at the PRC meeting in February 2008; further pay rises of £15,000/£10,000 per year in April 2008; and £10,000/£5,000 on October 2008 pursuant to the seventh NSD Memo.
Saturday School
F(5)(ii) Dr Patel and Mr Day
(1) First, they were volunteer governors, who dedicated much of their spare time to helping at the school. Dr Patel, in particular, worked very long hours on top of his full-time medical practice, in trying to deliver the NSD. I have no doubt that both of them were genuine in their desire to better the lot of the pupils and the local community.
(2) Second, despite attempting to do so, the Claimant has failed to identify any credible motive for why Dr Patel or Mr Day would have been party to deliberate misuse of public money (see paragraphs 314ff above). While motive is no part of any cause of action pleaded against them, I consider it to be a highly relevant factor in considering whether they acted dishonestly.
(3) Third, they are both men with otherwise untarnished reputations.
(4) Fourth, the culture at the school, already well established by the time the ad hoc procedure commenced, was one of heavy investment in, and the rewarding of, staff by remuneration for additional duties and the payment of bonuses. This culture was reflected in a report by Mr Davies to the FMC in June 2005: "he was very pleased to announce that Copland was one of the highest paying schools in the borough. Copland actually pay their staff approximately 83% of the budget."
(5) Fifth, this was part of a broader policy of incorporating practices from the public sector as a way of incentivising staff: see the evidence of Mr Deshmukh referred to at paragraph 185 above. It is important not to view the events at the school with the benefit of today's policy which appears to be firmly set against the payment of bonuses. To the governors, there was plenty of corroborative evidence that the policy of incentivising staff was reaping dividends in terms of success.
(6) Sixth, Mr Davies was undoubtedly a forceful and persuasive character. Not only that, but he was a publicly lauded and successful headteacher. By 2005, he had been at the school for seventeen years. During that time there had been no cause to doubt his reputation for dedication and integrity. As I have noted in section A above, the school was consistently receiving positive reports from Ofsted and from Brent's School Improvement Services.
(7) Seventh, reflecting their part-time and volunteer status, governors of a school are necessarily dependent to a large degree on what they are told by the headteacher and other staff at the school. This is particularly so where payments to staff other than Mr Davies were concerned, where Dr Patel and Mr Day were wholly reliant on Mr Davies' recommendations (whether at PRC meetings or through the ad hoc procedure).
(8) Eighth, the NSD was, if not unique, a highly unusual venture for a school to embark on, as Mr Davies consistently reminded Dr Patel and Mr Day in the memos. Dr Patel was closely involved in it throughout and would have seen the substantial time and effort put in by Mr Davies. It is important to view these payments without the hindsight that the project was ultimately a failure. While the fact that it encountered significant difficulties from 2006 onwards is a reason to doubt whether bonuses paid on the basis of success could have been justified at the time, nevertheless to the extent that Dr Patel and Mr Day were being asked to approve payments to reward the additional work being carried out, I accept that from their perspective those difficulties would appear to have given rise to an even greater workload. It would be understandable, in these circumstances, that Dr Patel and Mr Day would be influenced by Mr Davies' description (which he first used in the first NSD Memo) that he was holding the equivalent of two headships. Mr Day's reliance on Dr Patel's prior approval of NSD related payments is more understandable, given Dr Patel's close involvement with the project.
(9) Ninth, it is plausible that the persuasive drafting in the memos made it more difficult to question the claims made in them. These included: the glowing terms in which Mr Davies' achievements and those of other staff were praised in the memos; the level of detail put into them; the repeated references to achievements peripheral to the subject of the memo to justify the payments being made; and the references to the amount of money being saved for the school, e.g. in the Ali Memos and the third NSD Memo ("Had we even considered paying external contractors to carry out your tasks, I have no doubt it would have cost the school a small fortune.").
Payments in and after October 2007
(1) Mr Davies (as I have noted above) believed that the parallel processes served different ends. The PRC meetings were about rewarding success across the school, whereas the ad hoc procedure was for rewarding additional duties undertaken by particular staff members. He would have very likely made this point to Dr Patel and Mr Day at the time.
(2) It is instructive to see what was revealed to the PRC meetings, at least in February 2008 and January 2009, namely previously awarded salary increases which were intended to continue. In other words, it seems a distinction was drawn between payments which had been made pursuant to what Dr Patel and Mr Day understood to be their delegated authority, where the PRC had no function, and ongoing payments, where the PRC was asked to approve them.
(3) There was a culture of secrecy surrounding bonuses at the school which bordered on paranoia. While (see section D(1) above) this was itself contrary to regulation and school policy, it was followed throughout the school and not the subject of any criticism from Mr Bryant. The fact that matters were not reported back to other committees (e.g. PRC decisions not reported to the FMC or the GB) was a fact of life within the school.
(4) Mr Davies was very much in control of the information flow to the PRC. It was he who drafted the PRC presentation document. Consistent with their attitude to him throughout, it is likely that Dr Patel and Mr Day did not think to question Mr Davies' approach.
Payments in 2005
Payments between January 2006 and June 2007
F(6) Defence under s.50(7) of the SFFA
"The governors of a school shall not incur any personal liability in respect of anything done in good faith in the exercise or purported exercise of their powers under subsection (3) or (6)."
F(7) Limitation in respect of claims for breach of fiduciary duty
(1) it is a claim "in respect of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to which the trustee was a party": s.21(1)(a) of the Limitation Act 1980; or
(2) it is a claim "to recover from the trustee trust property or the proceeds of trust property in the possession of the trustee or previously received by the trustee and converted to his use": s.21(1)(b) of the Limitation Act 1980.
Mr Davies
"Although a dishonest state of mind is a subjective mental state, the standard by which the law determines whether it is dishonest is objective. If by ordinary standards a Defendant's mental state would be characterised as dishonest, it is irrelevant that the Defendant judges by different standards. The Court of Appeal held this to be a correct state of the law and their Lordships agree."
"When dishonesty is in question the fact-finding tribunal must first ascertain (subjectively) the actual state of the individual's knowledge or belief as to the facts. The reasonableness or otherwise of his belief is a matter of evidence (often in practice determinative) going to whether he held the belief, but it is not an additional requirement that his belief must be reasonable; the question is whether it is genuinely held. When once his actual state of mind as to knowledge or belief as to facts is established, the question whether his conduct was honest or dishonest is to be determined by the fact-finder by applying the (objective) standards of ordinary decent people. There is no requirement that the Defendant must appreciate that what he has done is, by those standards, dishonest."
Dr Patel and Mr Day
G. Knowing receipt of funds paid in breach of fiduciary duty
"In my judgment, the position, in a commercial context, can be summarised as follows: (1) Baden types (1) to (3) knowledge on the part of a Defendant render receipt of trust property "unconscionable". It is not necessary to show that the Defendant realised that the transaction was "obviously" or "probably" in breach of trust or fraudulent; the possibility of impropriety or the Claimant's interest is sufficient. (2) Further Baden types (4) and (5) knowledge also render receipt "unconscionable" but only if, on the facts actually known to this Defendant, a reasonable person would either have appreciated that the transfer was probably in breach of trust or would have made inquiries or sought advice which would have revealed the probability of the breach of trust."
G(1) Limitation Act 1980 and knowing receipt
"(1) Subject to [subsections (3) and (4A)] below, where in the case of any action for which a period of limitation is prescribed by this Act, either
(a) the action is based upon the fraud of the Defendant; or
(b) any fact relevant to the plaintiff's right of action has been deliberately concealed from him by the Defendant; or
(c) the action is for relief from the consequences of a mistake;
the period of limitation shall not begin to run until the plaintiff has discovered the fraud, concealment or mistake (as the case may be) or could with reasonable diligence have discovered it. References in this subsection to the Defendant include references to the Defendant's agent and to any person through whom the Defendant claims and his agent.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) above, deliberate commission of a breach of duty in circumstances in which it is unlikely to be discovered for some time amounts to deliberate concealment of the facts involved in that breach of duty."
Action based on fraud of the Defendant
G(2) Claim in knowing receipt against Dr Evans
Limitation: Deliberate Concealment
Unconscionable receipt?
(1) monthly payments of £4,000, continuing after 10 July 2008, pursuant to the fifth NSD Memo dated June 2007;
(2) a lump sum payment of £10,000, pursuant to the memo dated 7 July 2008 but which according to the Particulars of Claim was paid on 14 July 2008; and
(3) a lump sum payment of £20,000 pursuant to the seventh NSD Memo dated 9 October 2008.
Payments outside the limitation period
Saturday School
G(3) Claim in knowing receipt against Mr Udokoro
A preliminary point: is the claim pleaded?
A further preliminary point: The extent of Mr Udokoro's knowledge of the overpayments to others
Limitation
(1) the claim against him is time-barred (unless extended under s.32) save in respect of payments received by him after 10 July 2008;
(2) as fraud is not an essential element in the cause of action, s.32(1) is not engaged; and
(3) the Claimant does not rely on s.32(2) as against Mr Udokoro.
G(4) Claim in knowing receipt against Ms McKenzie
(1) the claim against her is time-barred (unless extended under s.32) save in respect of payments received by her after 10 July 2008;
(2) as fraud is not an essential element in the cause of action, s.32(1) is not engaged; and
(3) the Claimant does not rely on s.32(2) as against Ms McKenzie.
H. Claim against the Fifth and Sixth Defendants for misfeasance in public office
(1) The Defendant must be a public officer;
(2) The Defendant must be exercising a power as a public officer;
(3) The Defendant must either (a) specifically intend to injure the Claimant (referred to as 'targeted malice'); or (b) know that there is no power to do the act complained and that it is likely to damage the Claimant.
(4) The act or omission of the Defendant must cause loss to the Claimant.
H(1) Public Officer
"First, what is the position held? Second, what is the nature of the duties undertaken by the employee or officer in that position? Third, does the fulfilment of those duties represent the fulfilment of one of the responsibilities of government such that the public have a significant interest in the discharge of that duty which is additional to or beyond an interest in anyone who might be directly affected by a serious failure in the performance of that duty? If the answer to this last question is "yes", the relevant employee or officer is acting as a public officer; if "no", he or she is not acting as a public officer."
H(2) Mental element
(1) An essential element of the tort of misfeasance in public office is that it requires bad faith.
(2) Bad faith may comprise a reckless indifference to whether the exercise of power was lawful, approving Clarke J's explanation at first instance [1996] 3 All ER 558, 581, that " reckless indifference to consequences is as blameworthy as deliberately seeking such consequences".
(3) Recklessness is used, in this context, in a subjective sense. That is, it is essential to find that the defendant appreciated the possibility that the action was unlawful but acted anyway (and is to be contrasted with objective recklessness, where a person fails, recklessly, to appreciate the risk of unlawfulness at all). As Lord Steyn said at p.193, addressing the argument that objective recklessness was sufficient, "The difficulty with this argument was that it could not be squared with a meaningful requirement of bad faith in the exercise of public powers which is the raison d'etre of the tort."
(4) The House of Lords rejected the argument that the plaintiff could recover all reasonably foreseeable losses, in favour of the rule that the plaintiff must establish not only that the defendant acted in the knowledge that his act was beyond his powers but also in the knowledge that his act would probably injure the plaintiff (or a class of which the plaintiff was a member). In this respect, too, however, subjective recklessness suffices: see per Lord Steyn at p.195H-196C. Lord Millett, at p.235E-F, emphasised that the essential requirement under both limbs of the tort was intentional harm: "The first limb, traditionally described as "targeted malice", covers the case where the official acts with intent to harm the plaintiff or a class of which the plaintiff is a member. The second is said to cover the case where the official acts without such intention but in the knowledge that his conduct will harm the plaintiff or such a class. I do not agree with this formulation. In my view the two limbs are merely different ways in which the necessary element of intention is established. In the first limb it is established by evidence; in the second by inference."
H(3) Damage
Limitation
"The question is not whether the plaintiffs should have discovered the fraud sooner; but whether they could with reasonable diligence have done so. The burden of proof is on them. They must establish that they could not have discovered the fraud without exceptional measures which they could not reasonably have been expected to take. In this context the length of the applicable period of limitation is irrelevant. In the course of argument May LJ observed that reasonable diligence must be measured against some standard, but that the six-year limitation period did not provide the relevant standard. He suggested that the test was how a person carrying on a business of the relevant kind would act if he had adequate but not unlimited staff and resources and were motivated by a reasonable but not excessive sense of urgency. I respectfully agree."
" it is inherent in section 32 (1) of the 1980 Act, particularly after considering the way in which Millett LJ expressed himself in Paragon Finance , that there must be an assumption that the Claimant desires to discover whether or not there has been a fraud. Not making any such assumption would rob the effect of the word "could", as emphasised by Millett LJ, of much of its significance. Further, the concept of "reasonable diligence" carries with it, as the judge said, the notion of a desire to know, and, indeed, to investigate."
"Another of way of making the same point, as I suggested in argument, might be that the "assumption" referred to by Neuberger LJ is an assumption on the part of the draftsman of section 32(1), because the concept of "reasonable diligence" only makes sense if there is something to put the Claimant on notice of the need to investigate whether there has been a fraud, concealment or mistake (as the case may be)."
I. Counterclaim by the First Defendant
J. Conclusion
(1) by reason of his breach of the fiduciary duty not dishonestly to spend the Claimant's money otherwise than for the purposes of the school, for all sums paid pursuant to the ad hoc memos identified in part 2 of the Appendix to this judgment, except for the payments pursuant to (i) the first Ali Memo; (ii) the first NSD Memo; and (iii) the memo dated 13 August 2007;
(2) by reason of his breach of duty not to permit his personal interests to conflict with his duties to the Claimant, all payments made to him via the ad hoc procedure, except for the payments pursuant to the first Ali Memo and the first NSD memo.
No more than the aggregate amount in (1) is recoverable, however, because the payments under (2) are subsumed within those under (1).
Part 1: Payments made at PRC meetings
(1) PRC Presentation Document of June 2003
(2) PRC Presentation Document of January 2004
(3) PRC Presentation Document of October 2004
(4) PRC Presentation Document of July 2005
(5) PRC Presentation Document July 2006
(6) PRC Presentation Document February 2008
(7) PRC Presentation Document of January 2009
Part 2: Payments made via the ad hoc procedure
15 December 2004 (the "first Ali Memo")
25 March 2005 (the "second Ali Memo")
10 June 2005 (the "third Ali Memo")
2 November 2005 (the "first NSD Memo")
7 December 2005 (the "second NSD Memo")
18 January 2006 (the "fourth Ali Memo")
13 March 2006 (the "fifth Ali Memo")
6 June 2006 (the "third NSD Memo")
September 2006 (the "sixth Ali Memo")
January 2007 (the "seventh Ali Memo")
1 March 2007 (the "Chalkhill Memo")
12 March 2007
May 2007 (the "fourth NSD Memo")
June 2007 (the "fifth NSD Memo")
23 June 2007
13 August 2007
15 October 2007 (the "sixth NSD Memo")
(1) £50,000 to Mr Davies, for "leading the development in addition to normal duties";
(2) £30,000 to Dr Evans, for "assisting leading the development plus normal duties";
(3) £12,000 to Mr Udokoro, for "legal advice, legal letters and contracts & site visits";
(4) £8,000 to Ms McKenzie, for "minute taking and verbatim reports, attending and coordinating meetings with potential developers & site visits to developers";
(5) £8,000 to Lesley Fields (Dr Evans' wife), for "identifying and arranging meetings with potential new developers, new business contacts, sponsors [and others]"; and
(6) £8,000 to Gareth Davies, for "liaison with New Dev. & project manager, site visits and meetings."
18 April 2008
7 July 2008
9 October 2008 (the "seventh NSD Memo")