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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Olafsson v Gissurarson [2006] EWHC 3162 (QB) (08 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2006/3162.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 3162 (QB), [2007] 2 All ER 88, [2007] 1 Lloyd's Rep 182 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Jon Olafsson |
Claimant / Respondent |
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- and - |
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Hannes Holmsteinn Gissurarson |
Defendant / Appellant |
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Mr Hugh Mercer (instructed by Spring Law) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 30 November and 8 December 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mackay:
Overview of the case
The Relevant Facts
The Relevant Rules
"These rules are a new procedural code with the overriding objective of enabling the court to deal with cases justly"…1.2: The Court must seek to give effect to the overriding objective when it –
(a) Exercises any power given to it by the rules; or
(b) Interprets any rule…
CPR 3.10: "Where there has been an error of procedure such as a failure to comply with a rule or practice direction" –
(a) The error does not invalidate any step taken in the proceedings unless the Court so orders; and
(b) The Court may make an order to remedy the error.
CPR 6.9 (1): The Court may dispense with the service of a document
(2) An application for an order to dispense with service may be made without notice.
CPR 6.24 (1): where a claim form is to be served out of the jurisdiction, it may be served by any method –
(a) Permitted by the law of the country in which it is to be served…
(2) Nothing in this rule or in any Court order shall authorise or require any person to do anything in the country where the claim form is to be served which is against the law of that country.
CPR 13.2: the Court must set aside a judgment entered under part 12 if judgment was wrongly entered because –
(a) In the case of a judgment in default of an acknowledgement of service, any of the conditions in rule 12.3(1) and 12.3(3) was not satisfied…
The relevant Icelandic law relating to service of process in that country is contained in the Icelandic Civil Procedure Act number 91/1991, article 83. The evidence before the Master was that the effect of that law was as follows: (1) Process is duly served if (a) the process server or a notary public bears witness to the service of the process on the summonee or any person competent to take delivery of the process in his or her place: (b) a duplicate of the process is sent by registered mail which is delivered and the postman bears witness to the delivery to the summonee or another person competent to take delivery of the process in his or her place.
(2) A summons is also adequately served if advertised in the Official Gazette pursuant to article 89
(3) In place of the service of process pursuant to paragraph (1), and with equal effect, a process may be made known by the following procedures:
(a) The summonee in person signs a declaration on the summons confirming acceptance of the delivery of its duplicate…..
(4) If the summonee attends the Court at the initial hearing of the case it is irrelevant whether or not the summons has been served or notified to the summonee, whether the service was deficient or the summons served with inadequate notice
The Master's Judgment
Could the Master have applied CPR 3.10 as he did?
"Specifically it cannot be used to avoid the consequences of failing to utilise rule 6.8 prospectively in order retrospectively to validate defective service. It certainly cannot be used retrospectively to create a deemed breach of the duty to acknowledge service and thereby to justify signing judgment in default. I would hold that this is not merely a matter of the exercise of the Courts discretion to remedy errors under rule 3.10(b) but goes to the scope of rule 3.10(a). Accordingly the approach of the Court of Appeal in the Goldean Mariner does not apply to the scope of rule 3.10".
"I do not consider that CPR rule 3.10 can possibly help the claimants case in relation to the service of the copy claim form.…CPR 3.10 does not have the effect of treating the document as fictionally having been served".
He therefore approved Colman J's decision in Shiblaq No.2. Mr Dhillon for the appellant claims this dictum as binding Court of Appeal authority on the issue before me in this appeal. In my judgment he puts his case too high. Paragraph 95 was not strictly speaking the ratio decidendi of the appeal, nor was it a finding which had to be made to reach that ratio. It is however highly persuasive and powerful support for the views of Colman J, and might, if drawn to his attention, have caused the Master to take a different view from that which he took. I should therefore turn to see how the respondent meets these authorities.
"In my view this notice is somewhat misleading. CPR 6.24 does not require service abroad 'by any method…permitted by the law of the country in which it is to be served'. On the contrary, it is implicit in 6.24(2) that the Court may permit any alternative method of service abroad under CPR 6.8 so long as it does not contravene the laws of the country where service is be effected. In Shiblaq Colman J found that the method of service adopted in Turkey was simply not permitted by Turkish law for the service of foreign proceedings but "was a method expressly excluded by reason of the Turkish objection registered under the Hague Convention and could not therefore be within the scope of CPR 6.24(a)" (para 27). The decision is therefore not authority for the proposition that service abroad must be expressly permitted by the foreign jurisdiction in order for it to good service within CPR 6.24".
Fresh Evidence
Discretion
CPR Part 6.9