BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Chweidan v Mischcon De Reya Solicitors [2014] EWHC 2685 (QB) (31 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/2685.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 2685 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
MR RUSSELL CHWEIDAN |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
MISCHCON DE REYA SOLICITORS |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Nigel Porter(instructed by Robin Simon) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 23, 24, 25 & 26 June 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE SIMLER DBE :
Introduction
Witness Credibility and Comment on Documents
The Facts
- During 2007 RC said he had tried to increase his hours as quickly as he could and by year end he was leaving the office between 4 and 5 PM, albeit some days he still left at three if he had a medical appointment
- RC said he was able to maintain client accounts, he found prospecting new accounts more difficult due to the reduced hours he was working.
- During his appraisal discussion in early 2008 RC said it was discussed that he needed to diversify his client base away from client P and he acknowledged this.
- With regards to his discretionary bonus award in 2007 RC said "he had made the following assumptions; that he had not been working a full day, that he did not consider himself to be 'very marketable', that he thought he was an easy way to save money, the market conditions had not been favourable and that it was 'easy to pay him less'.
- RC said he was surprised to be asked to attend an OH assessment in January 2008 because he was working full-time by then. "RC said that he had agreed with OH that the only reasonable adjustments necessary were already in place; flexibility with his working hours to attend medical appointments.
- In relation to his selection for redundancy, RC said he was advised "the bank was not making as much money, the business needed to reduce headcount, RC's accounts could be covered by other members of the team and that he would not be replaced."
- "RC said he thought his discretionary bonus award was related to age and his disability. RC said that he believed that this "same mix" contributed to the decision to place his role "at risk". RC said that he thinks that when he did not leave the bank following the communication of his discretionary bonus award that his role was placed "at risk". RC said that he did have less accounts than his colleagues and he wasn't always there to be able to close trades at 7pm at night. RC said that he understands the logic and he thinks this was applied to his situation and in part agrees."
"You also explained during our meeting that following your return to work, you were able to maintain client accounts but found prospecting new ones more difficult due to the phased return to work hours that you were working. Having spoken at length with Ian and James, I believe that you had the opportunity to prospect new clients whilst you were working reduced hours. I also find that you were told on a number of occasions to delegate the more time intensive and less technical tasks (e.g. the basket breaking lists) associated with [client P] to more junior members of the team to enable you to spend the time managing the client relationship and diversifying your client base. In our meeting you advised me that during your year end review with James he had given you the feedback that as an ED you should not be doing lists of the [client P] account and that you were told to give this task to other team members. You also said during our meeting that you had advised James that these types of tasks could not be delegated to more junior members of the team which I find not to be the case".
- In relation to 2007 bonus he stated "I was asked to diversify my revenues and I did so, increasing my non-client P revenues by over 50%…"
- In relation to selection for redundancy he stated "Stephen states that I was selected for redundancy primarily because of a desire to have salespeople selling a broader range of products. A rudimentary analysis will show that I did indeed sell a broad range of products (and not just to client P).
- RC said he had a couple of extra accounts in 2007 and his production had increased from about 17,000,000 to 25,000,000 and became more broad. Client P was a lower percentage… RC said that in his reviews in 2007 JH stated that he wanted to see RC pushing more new clients.
- RC said he was unable to work the typical 7am to 6/6.30pm that he was doing before his accident.
- Asked about his development areas and whether he had increased his account breadth, "RC said he was getting his other accounts to do more so he did feel he met expectations". RC went on to say that if he had been selected for redundancy because it was thought he had focused too much on one client account, this should have been mentioned to him at some point through the process as being a massively important point, but it had not been mentioned to him.
- Asked about whether diversifying his revenues had come up in his reviews, RC said that it had come up, and "he had made a dramatic increase in his other accounts and that he was managing to do that as well as making sure that any money they had on the table from client P was used".
- In relation to 2007 bonus the Claimant said he "had a big business going forward and said that some other areas did not. ….RC said that this was the second year that he had still not received what he felt he deserved and had been led to believe he would receive. RC said he believes they plan to underpay him to see if he would leave as this would be cheaper than making him redundant. RC then said when he fail to leave he now feels that they had no choice to make him redundant and this led to him being put at risk on 19 February 2008."
"With regard to the duration of the hearing, Russell would like to know the likelihood of a costs order being made against him if he requests the extra half day and loses his appeals. If it is very likely, I think he is inclined to leave it at 1 day.
"As for costs against us – there is a real prospect here that costs could be awarded against Russell. I don't think much of any of the appeal points that we are raising and I expect that the EAT will be none too impressed with most of them [if not all of them]. We could therefore see Russell, realistically, being asked to pay the costs of JP Morgan preparing for that part of the appeal, and attending on that part of the appeal."
(i) a practice of reallocating accounts away from the Claimant in February 2008 as the only member of the hedge fund sales team to have accounts for signed away from him;
(ii) a practice of calibrating bonus to the Claimant's individual circumstances and market value which is said to have disadvantaged him - instead JP Morgan should have taken into account in assessing bonus, the fact that the Claimant had not been allocated any new accounts in 2007 when assessing his entitlement;
(iii) a practice in relation to the assessment of redundancy selection criteria and its application to the Claimant which is unexplained but is said to have disadvantaged him to the extent that allowances should have been made for the effect of his disability on the selection criteria applied in his case; and
(iv) the practice of placing the Claimant in a small pool of three people from whom to select one for redundancy was said to heighten the risk of dismissal in his case so that a reasonable adjustment would have been to include significantly more people in the pool for selection.
Legal Framework
"103 …..The law does not, however, demand either omniscience or infallibility in lawyers any more than it does in doctors or architects. The law's standard of reasonable competence means not only that there will be errors which are not compensable but that legal advisers are not expected to divine every claim that a client may theoretically have. In the course of his evidence to the judge Mr Susman said to counsel cross-examining him for the Claimant firm:
"You are suggesting that it was my obligation to tell Mr Fox that he might have an action against somebody who I thought had not been negligent for losing something which I never thought he had. I don't think that was my obligation."
I consider that answer to have been legally and factually sound."
"It is plain that when a solicitor is instructed by a client to act in a transaction, a duty of care arises. But it is also plain that the scope of that duty of care is variable. It will depend, first and foremost, upon the content of the instructions given to the solicitor by the client. It will depend also on the particular circumstances of the case. It is a duty that it is not helpful to try to describe in the abstract. The scope of the duty may vary depending on the characteristics of the client, in so far as they are apparent to the solicitor. A youthful client, unversed in business affairs, might need explanation and advice from his solicitor before entering into a commercial transaction that it would be pointless, or even sometimes impertinence, for the solicitor to offer to an obviously experienced businessman"
"The question is has the plaintiff lost some right of value, some chose in action of reality and substance? In such a case it may be that its value is not easy to determine, but it is the duty of the court to determine that value as best it can"
"None of the loss of struck-out litigation cases which I have considered in this judgment, including cases which are subsequent to and cite Allied Maples, suggest that any causation issue in the underlying litigation is dealt with as a matter of a finding on the balance of probabilities, rather than as merely another issue within the generality of issues in the underlying litigation which have to be assessed for their prospects only; nor should the position, in my judgment, be otherwise. The causation issue is, in truth, just one among a number of issues which, in the underlying litigation, would have had to have been litigated or settled. Provided the underlying claim is of some real value, then the separate causation issue which arises in the instant claim out of the loss of underlying litigation answers itself. In other words, unless the underlying claim is at one or other end of the Kitchen spectrum [i.e. that it was either bound to succeed or bound to fail], it is not possible to say on the findings of fact in this case that every Judge would have regarded the issue in the same way. Ultimately, the value of the underlying litigation did not lie in Mrs Dixon's own hands, but in the hands of the court (or, in the case of settlement, in the hands of bilateral negotiation)."
"1. The legal burden lies on the plaintiff to prove that in losing the opportunity to pursue his claim (or defence to counter-claim) he has lost something of value i.e. that his claim (or defence) had a real and substantial rather than merely a negligible prospect of success…
2. The evidential burden lies on the defendants to show that despite their having acted for the plaintiff in the litigation and charged for their services, that litigation was of no value to their client, so that he lost nothing by their negligence in causing it to be struck out. Plainly the burden is heavier in a case where the solicitors have failed to advise their client of the hopelessness of his position… If, of course, the solicitors have advised their client with regard to the merits of his claim (or defence) such advice is likely to be highly relevant.
3. If and insofar as the court may now have greater difficulty in discerning the strength of the plaintiff's original claim (or defence) than it would have had at the time of the original action, such difficulty should not count against him, but rather against his negligent solicitors…
4. If and when the court decides that the plaintiff's chances in the original action were more than merely negligible it will then have to evaluate them. That requires the court to make a realistic assessment of what would have been the plaintiff's prospects of success had the original litigation been fought out. Generally speaking one would expect the court to tend towards a generous assessment given that it was the defendants' negligence which lost the plaintiff the opportunity…"
.
i) The Claimant must prove that the claim had a real and substantial, rather than merely a negligible prospect of success.
ii) If the court decides that the Claimant's chances were more than merely negligible then it will have to evaluate them. That requires the court to make a realistic assessment of what would have been the Claimant's prospects of success had the original litigation been fought out.
iii) This means that the court should assess the likely level of damages which the Claimant would most probably have recovered had the underlying action proceeded to judgment and then apply an appropriate fraction to that sum to reflect the uncertainties of recovering such damages.
iv) In some loss of a chance cases it may be appropriate to view the prospects on a fairly broad brush basis whilst in other cases it may be correct to look at the prospects in greater detail. In my judgment, whilst a broad brush approach is appropriate here the evidence and arguments in relation to the issues that would have arisen in the action have been canvassed extensively and clearly, enabling a more detailed approach than might otherwise be adopted.
v) On the other hand the oral and documentary evidence available is more limited than what would have been available in the employment tribunal action and I have, obviously, not heard from witnesses who would have given evidence in that action. It is also possible that the claim might have settled. These features must be factored into any assessment and it would be wrong in any event, to conduct a trial within a trial or to make any firm findings in those circumstances as to what the EAT or an employment tribunal would have decided.
vi) If there are "separate hurdles", the percentage prospects on each should be multiplied together to give an overall lower percentage prospect.
Issues
(1) So far as concerns the claim in respect of JP Morgan's alleged failure to make reasonable adjustments:
a. Was there a failure to advise or assist the Claimant to raise a grievance in compliance with the statutory grievance procedure, in respect of such a claim in relation to his bonus entitlement for 2007 and/or his selection for redundancy;
b. Was there a failure to plead such a claim in either or both employment tribunal claims;
c. Was there a failure to amend either or both employment tribunal claims to plead such a claim within the statutory time limits and in time so as not to cause prejudice to JP Morgan;
d. Was there a failure to advise as to the consequences of Malcolm for the Claimant's existing claims.
(2) If any breach is established, did the Claimant have more than minimal prospects of success in making claims for failure to make reasonable adjustments and if so what were the values of such claims and what were the chances of success.
(3) So far as concerns the admitted failure to lodge the Claimant's cross appeal with the EAT in time:
a. Did the Claimant have a more than minimal prospect of success on appeal in relation to any of his grounds and if so which;
b. If so, did the Claimant have a more than minimal prospect of success in any remitted claim before an employment tribunal, and if so what was the most probable value of the claim and what was the overall chance of success.
The First Issue: was there a breach of duty in relation to the question of reasonable adjustments at any of the stages identified at (a) to (d)
The Second Issue: If any breach is established, did the Claimant have more than minimal prospects of success in making claims for failure to make reasonable adjustments and if so what were the values of such claims and what were the chances of success.
• they are different to be amendments pleaded by Mr Sheldon;
• there is an issue as to what (if anything) JP Morgan could reasonably have been expected to know about the Claimant's disability prior to 21 January 2008;
• JP Morgan no doubt had business reasons for allocating accounts to particular employees with the ability and skill necessary to deal with those accounts;
• paying additional remuneration not warranted by performance is unlikely, save in the most compelling circumstances, to amount to a reasonable adjustment;
• a suggestion that the Claimant should have been in some form of protected position as a result of his disability and exempt from consideration for redundancy is unlikely to be regarded as reasonable;
• similarly, a suggestion that the redundancy selection pool should be artificially altered in order to ensure that the Claimant had a greater chance of not being selected is unlikely to have been regarded as reasonable;
• finally, it is not clear that these proposed adjustments would have made any material difference to the outcome of the quantification of the Claimant's bonus or to his selection for dismissal.
Third Issue: In relation to the cross appeal, did the Claimant have a more than minimal prospect of success in any remitted claim before an employment tribunal and what is the value?
"The case for age discrimination put forward by the Claimant does not rely on the Claimant personally being picked on because of his age. The tribunal has found that Mr Hayward and Mr Slatter made various comments to suggest that in broad terms they were looking to support more junior members of the team in comparison with more senior members. Accordingly the Claimant has not proved facts from which the tribunal could conclude that the respondent treated him less favourably than others would have been treated on the ground of age."