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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 >> Samara v MBI & Partners UK Ltd & Anor [2014] EWHC 563 (QB) (04 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/563.html Cite as: (2014) 164(7598) NLJ 18, [2014] 3 Costs LR 457, [2014] EWHC 563 (QB) |
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Appeal No: QB/2013/0436 |
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MR SAMIR RAMZI SAMARA |
Claimant and Respondent |
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- and - |
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(1) MBI & PARTNERS UK LIMITED |
First Defendant and Appellant |
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(2) AJWA RMTI CO |
Second Defendant |
____________________
Derrick Dale QC and Rebecca Loveridge (instructed by Trowers and Hamlin LLP) for the First Defendant/Appellant
The Second Defendant was not represented or present
Hearing date: 7 February 2014
Further written submissions served on 12 February 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SILBER:
I. Introduction
II. The Nature and History of the Claim
"I am satisfied that it was clear to Mr Salfiti that although I endeavoured to speak to my client, it was a matter for him whether he made the application or not and, if so, when".
"I am writing to acknowledge receipt of your email below. I will be taking instructions from my client on the contents of your email".
III. The Application to Set Aside the Judgment before the Master
"(1) … the court may set aside or vary a judgment entered under Part 12 if –
(a) the defendant has a real prospect of successfully defending the claim; or
(b) it appears to the court that there is some other good reason why –
(i) the judgment should be set aside or varied; or
(ii) the defendant should be allowed to defend the claim.
(2) In considering whether to set aside) or vary a judgment entered under Part 12, the matters to which the court must have regard include whether the person seeking to set aside the judgment made an application to do so promptly".
"1. No case shall be accepted by the commission provided for in this law involving a claim for rights provided for in this law or arising from a work contract after 12 months following termination of the work relation.
2. No case involving a claim of the rights provided for in the previous Labour Law shall be accepted after 12 months following the effective date of this law."
"A debtor who did nothing until the creditor sought to enforce the judgment who then applied to set aside was refused permission to set aside, it being held that the debtor's conduct amounted to an abuse of process."
"30…I do not consider that it would be in accordance with the overriding objective to grant an application made at least 16 months after the First Defendant became aware of the judgment against it, with the most part of that period of delay unexplained.
31 The delay in this case is so long and so unexplained, in particular where there was an attendance at the hearing in February 2012 but no action taken at all, that I do not consider it appropriate to exercise the court's discretion to set aside judgment. That is the case even where I have concluded that one ground of defence has a real prospect of success. The First Defendant had had every opportunity from at least 20 January 2012 to make the application, so there is no denial of access to justice. Accordingly, I will not set aside the default judgment."
IV. The Submissions
(a) The Master erred in finding that there was excessive delay and in holding that it was a decisive factor;(b) Insufficient weight was attached to the Claimant's delay in bringing the claim which was extraordinary, unaccountable and also unaccounted for;
(c) The Claimant and his solicitors knew that the First Defendant was seeking to set aside the default judgment and was seeking to obtain the Claimant's consent;
(d) There have been developments since the hearing before the Master because, as I have explained in paragraph 3 above, Cooke J has held there will have to be a trial on the fraud claim and the limitation defence could then easily have been resolved in the context of that claim;
(e) The Claimant will not suffer any prejudice if the judgment is set aside as the amount claimed of £376,000 has been paid into court; and that
(f) The First Defendant will suffer very considerable injustice unless the appeal is allowed and the judgment is set aside.
V. Does the new regime apply to the application to set aside the judgment pursuant to CPR 13.3?
"1.1. (1) These rules are a new procedural code with the overriding objective of enabling the court to deal with cases justly and at proportionate cost.
(2) Dealing with a case justly and at a proportionate cost includes, so far as is practicable …
(f) enforcing compliance with rules, practice directions and order."
(a) "[T]he new more robust approach [which] will mean that from now on relief from sanctions should be granted more sparingly than previously" ([46]);
(b) This approach, which meant an end to the belief that the "culture of delay and non-compliance "would continue (ibid);
(c) "[T]he starting point should be that the sanction has been properly imposed and complies with the overriding objective" [45];
(d) Relief would be granted if the default is trivial "provided that an application is made promptly" (ibid [40]) or if there is a good reason for failure to comply (ibid [41]). Good reasons are likely to arise from; circumstances outside the control of the party in default (ibid [43]) and by contrast inefficiency or incompetence of a party's solicitors –for example, the fact that a deadlines is simply overlooked- is unlikely to prove a good reason (ibid [41]) (see Leggatt J in Summit Navigation Ltd and another v Generale Romania Asigurare Reasigurare SA and another [2014 EWHC 398 (Comm)[39]); and
(e) Applications for relief must be made promptly (ibid [40] and [46]).
VI. The Nature and Extent of the Delay
(i) The period from 11 August 2011 when the Acknowledgment of Service was due until 20 January 2012
(ii) The period from January 2012 to 27 March 2013, which is the date of the telephone call when Miss Randall returned a telephone call from Mr Salfiti
"27… In circumstances where there had already been over a year's delay, it was incumbent upon the First Defendant, if it stood any chance of being successful on an application, to make such application immediately without waiting further to find out whether the Claimant would agree to set aside judgment".
VII. Should the Appeal be allowed under the New Regime?
i) Insufficient weight was attached to the Claimant's delay in bringing the claim. I cannot see how that could or would have justified the delay of the First Defendant in seeking to set aside the judgment whether under the old regime or the new regime;ii) The Claimant and his solicitors knew that the First Defendant was seeking to set aside the judgment, but the stark fact is that the First Defendant did not do so; that failure is the important factor under the old and the new rules as justifying a decision to refuse to set aside the judgment;
iii) The decision of Cooke J that the fraud claim will go ahead means that the limitation defence could easily be heard in the context of that action. This overlooks the fact that issues of prejudice are no longer relevant on applications where there has been what I consider to have been a serious, sustained and inexcusable failure by the First Defendant and its legal adviser Mr. Salfiti to comply with the well-known and important obligations to make a prompt application to set aside judgment entered in default probably as a result of inefficiency on their part;
iv) The Claimant will not suffer any prejudice as the amount claimed has been paid into Court. This ignores not merely the fact that issues of prejudice are no longer relevant in case where there has been a delay of the kind and of the nature that occurred in this case, but also that the Claimant is prejudiced as he is being delayed receiving the money due to him under the judgment; and
v) The First Defendant will not suffer an injustice if the appeal is not allowed but that ignores the fact that they have acted in flagrant breach of the Rules and in particular of the need to make the application to set aside promptly.
VIII. Should the Appeal be allowed under the Old Regime?
"...Under the pre-CPR regime an appeal was a "rehearing in the fullest sense of the word, and, and the judge exercised his/her discretion afresh while giving appropriate weight to the way the lower court had exercised its discretion in the matter. Under the new regime, the decision of the lower court will attract much greater significance. The appeal court's duty is limited to a review of that decision, and it may only interfere in quite limited circumstances set out in CPR. r 52.11 (3)".
"32…The epithet "wrong" is to be applied to the substance of the decision made by the lower court. If the appeal is against the exercise of a discretion by the lower court, the decision of the House of Lords in G v G [1985] 1 WLR 647 warrants attention. In that case Lord Fraser of Tullybelton said at p 652C:
"Certainly it would not be useful to inquire whether different shades of meaning are intended to be conveyed by words such as "blatant error" used by the President in the present case, and words such as "clearly wrong", "plainly wrong", or simply "wrong" used by other judges in other cases. All these various expressions were used in order to emphasise the point that the appellate court should only interfere when they consider that the judge of the first instance has not merely preferred an imperfect solution which is different from an alternative imperfect solution which the Court of Appeal might or would have adopted, but has exceeded the generous ambit within which a reasonable disagreement is possible."
IX. Conclusion