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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 >> Ramsden v HM Revenue and Customs [2019] EWHC 3566 (QB) (20 December 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/3566.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3566 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
TERENCE PHILIP RAMSDEN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Defendant |
____________________
Matthew Parfitt (instructed by HMRC Solicitors' Office) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15th – 19th July 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FREEDMAN :
I CONTENTS
PARA | SUBJECT |
1-2 | Introduction |
3-52 | Factual Background |
53-58 | What happened to the Claimant's Documents? |
Issues (i)-(xxvi) | The Preliminary Issue as ordered by Master Thornett |
59-66 | The Court's approach to evidence |
67-97 | Conversion/wrongful interference with goods |
98-116 | Date Protection Act claims |
117-140 | Loss of chance |
141-155 | Causation of loss |
156-176 | Limitation |
177 | Further issue |
178 | Conclusion |
II INTRODUCTION
III FACTUAL BACKGROUND
(a) The 1980's
(b) The 1990s
"I have been served with a bankruptcy petition. The hearing is on 5 March 1992 and I am at present advised that the petition should not be opposed and I am likely to be adjudicated bankrupt on that day".
"The information made available to the Trustee makes it more than clear that there is every justification for making an application for complete postponement of all tax for 1981/82.…
I am advised that the said information makes it clear that the Claimant did not receive income that would be assessed for 1981/82 and there are the strongest possible grounds for ensuring that such an application for postponement of tax is justifiably being made.
The Agent acting on behalf of the Claimant at the time the assessment was raised for 1986/87, lodged on appeal, which was accepted by the Inland Revenue and he then went on to lodge an application for partial postponement of tax. Accounting information now provided demonstrates that the Claimant did not receive any taxable income for the year of assessment 1986/87, and consequently an application is to be made to the General Commissioners for a further request for postponement of tax in accordance with that legislation. As stated, I have been provided with sufficient evidence to consider that such an application will be valid."
(c) Hearing before the General Commissioners in late 2004
"In conclusion there is no doubt if Ramsden's claims had not been resisted then there was a very strong likelihood that the £2,574,681.00 paid on account in the previous SCO investigation may have had to have been repaid to Ramsden. How this is claimed as yield under our current SCOLs system I am not certain. Please advise."
(d) Meeting of the Claimant and Mr Allcock in 2014/2015
(e) Requests under the Data Protection Acts in late 2016/early 2017
(f) The instant claim brought on 27 February 2017
(g) Application for annulment heard in May 2018
(h) Hearings before Master Thornett in 2017/2018
IV WHAT HAPPENED TO THE CLAIMANT'S DOCUMENTS?
i) The Claimant's tax position was one of the issues considered by expert forensic accountants (instructed by each side) in the SFO prosecution in 1993-4. It appears that these accountants were not hampered by the Defendants' seizure of documents. Indeed, they indicate that there are extensive further sources of documents including the Claimant's accountants Berke Fine, who prepared his trading accounts, and the SFO itself.ii) The Claimant's expert, Mr Harverd, was in possession of tax documents relating to the Claimant's affairs. The Claimant could have obtained documents from any of these sources as well as from the Defendants. There is no evidence that Mr Harverd was hampered by a lack of documentation: in the SFO proceedings he prepared an interim statement dated 30 June 1993. There is no evidence that the Claimant sought to obtain the documents taken by the Defendants in order to assist with the defence of the SFO proceedings. Mr Harverd made a statement in 1999 (after he had retired) which refers to the need to consult with leading tax counsel to determine the Claimant's tax liabilities. There was no mention in this statement that the Claimant would need the documents taken in 1988. Mr Harverd was able to take account of the loss relief available on his estimate from the period to 26 January 1988 and arrived at a preliminary tax position which was c.£36 million lower than that advanced by the prosecution based on a simple calculation of tax relief at a 60% tax rate for losses of £60 million.
iii) The SFO also relied on a statement prepared by Dragoslav Lazarevic obtained by the Claimant from the Insolvency Service who confirmed that the Claimant had not taken into account the potentially available loss relief in the order of £56 million. He also evidenced that in the mid-1980s, certain investments were made with a view to reduce the Claimant's tax liability (para. 7.17), such as interests in "Panther Oil and Gas Limited Partnership" and "purchases of forestry" (in fact the Claimant also incurred expenditure on reforestation in Scotland, which would similarly have qualified for certain tax reliefs at that time). In particular, Mr Lazarevic was able to conduct a detailed analysis of nine individual trades in section 11 of his report. In relation to these trades, he seems to have had all the details which the Claimant claims were only ascertainable from the 1988 Documents. He had access to the Claimant's "accounting records", "supporting documentation" (para 11.02), "counterparty ledgers" (paras 11.14, 11.18 and passim), the Claimant's "personal cash book" (paras 11.19 and 11.76), bank statements (e.g. 11.41), faxes sent to the Claimant from counterparties (e.g. para 11.81), personal nominal ledger (6.02) and trade nominal ledger (4.01). The Claimant repeatedly stressed in cross-examination that Mr Lazarevic was only looking at the three years 1985-1988. This ignores the confirmation of Mr Band that T C Coombs held the necessary documents for the period to the end of 1984.
iv) There were other sources of documents including the Claimant's accountants Berke Fine, who prepared his trading accounts, and the SFO itself. The SFO's expert, Mr Lazarevic, conducted a detailed examination of the Claimant's trading income and tax affairs, and the Claimant's expert subjected that to a detailed critique.
v) Even after this seizure, in March 1994 the Claimant's solicitors, Burton Copeland, were in possession of "substantially greater" than one million pages of the Claimant's documents. These documents are likely to have been relevant to the Claimant's business affairs. Any documents taken by the Defendants must have left a large body of papers in the Claimant's own control, which could have been used to establish the Claimant's tax position. This appears to be a huge amount of material. They were "either stored at our storage facility or at a facility made available to Mr Ramsden for storage of his own documents": see letter of Burton Copeland of 19 May 1994. The Claimant made a payment of £1,600 in relation to the storage of these documents at this time.
vi) At a meeting with his trustee in bankruptcy on 7 December 1994, the Claimant stated that the trading records of Glen International are "currently held in a vault in Los Angeles"; he referred to the possibility of his numerous professional advisers having retained documents, and added that "most of his other records had been seized by the SFO."
vii) There was a letter written by the trustee in bankruptcy to the Defendants on 11 June 2002, referring to the late appeal in relation to the 1981/82 assessment as set out above. The effect of that letter was to show to Deputy Judge Agnello QC that the Claimant was in a position to make the necessary appeals in 2002 or earlier.
viii) In 2002, the Claimant's tax adviser Mr Fox wrote to a taxation consultant, Mr Surfleet, that the Claimant had no tax liabilities from his activities in the 1980s, and that "full details are held on file to support the above to include accounting information."
ix) There must have been other documents in order to carry out day to day business which were not handed over to the Claimant. The Claimant continued to trade following the Defendants taking the 1988 Documents. Despite his denials in the witness box, it is plain that the Claimant needed to know his historic trading positions in order to run his business going forward. Even if the scale of his operations diminished, as he claimed (although Ms Aylott said there was no diminution in volume) there would still be a need to understand historic positions. It cannot be true that the Defendants took the Claimant's only copies of this information, otherwise the Claimant would have had to have terminate business immediately.
x) Mr Band confirmed that although it would be difficult, it would have been possible for the Claimant to reconstruct his trading operations with T C Coombs from documents held by T C Coombs. This period extended as far as the end of 1984. He confirmed that T C Coombs kept originals of the books of accounts, contract notes and cash books in relation to the Claimant's trading. Although the Claimant was provided with at least 12 boxes of documents, where these documents were important the Claimant was only given photocopies and T C Coombs retained the originals.
V THE PRELIMINARY ISSUE AS ORDERED BY MASTER THORNETT
i) The Preliminary Issue trial is concerned with the following, which have been agreed by the parties save for the parts of issues in paras. 17 and 27 below:"Is HMRC liable to the Claimant in principle (aside from any issues of quantum) in respect of:(a) The Data Protection Act claims;(b) The claim as reversioner for damages to reversionary interests; and(c) The claim for conversion and/or wrongful interference with goods at common law and under the Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977?"Here, (a), (b) and (c) together are the "Preliminary Issue Claims".Common Ground
ii) It is common ground that the Defendants took or received into their possession at least some documents belonging to the Claimant in the spring of 1988.
iii) It is common ground that the Claimant had a relevant interest in the said documents, either as owner or as reversioner, at all material times.
iv) It is common ground that the Defendants are now and have been since at least the commencement of these proceedings, unable to deliver up the said documents.
The preliminary issue can be broken down into the following issues
A. Conversion / wrongful interference with goods
v) What documents did the Defendants take or receive into their possession from the Claimant in the spring of 1988 (any such documents being referred to as the "1988 Documents")?
vi) What statements have the Defendants made to the Claimant from time to time concerning the fate of the 1988 Documents?
vii) What on the balance of probabilities has happened to the 1988 Documents? If the Court concludes that they have been destroyed by the Defendants, then on which date, or if that is uncertain, what is the latest date by which it is likely that they were destroyed?
viii) In relation to the claims in conversion or for wrongful interference with goods or as a reversioner, has there been an unequivocal refusal by the Defendants to deliver up the 1988 Documents, and if so, when?
a) Were the Defendants under a duty to preserve the 1988 Documents indefinitely for the Claimant's benefit and/or return them to him pursuant to either the reasonable understanding of the Claimant or any applicable duty of care; or were the Defendants entitled to destroy those documents in accordance with their retention policies?ix) In the premises, subject to the issues of loss, causation and limitation below, has the Claimant established the Defendant's prima facie liability for (a) conversion and/or wrongful interference with goods; (b) damage to the Claimant's reversionary interest in the 1988 Documents?
B. Data Protection Act claims
x) What relevant duties did the Defendants have in relation to the 1988 Documents from time to time as a result of the Data Protection Act 1984 and the Data Protection Act 1998? In particular:
a) Were the Defendants under a duty under that legislation to return the 1988 Documents to the Claimant and, if so, when?b) Were the Defendants under a duty under that legislation to preserve the 1988 Documents until so returned?c) Were the Defendants at any time entitled to and/or under an obligation to destroy the 1988 Documents in accordance with their retention policies applicable to the Defendants' own documents?d) If so, what retention policies were applicable to the 1988 Documents, and on what date did the Defendants become entitled to and/or under an obligation to destroy them pursuant to any applicable retention policy?e) Was the Defendant required to give notice to the Claimant of an impending destruction? If so, did the Defendant duly give notice to the Claimant of impending destruction?f) Were any of the Defendants' relevant duties modified by any request from the Claimant for the return of the documents or any statements made to him as to their availability?xi) In response to the Claimant's Data Protection Act requests made in 2016 and 2017 ("DPA requests"):
a) Did the Defendants breach the Data Protection Acts 1984 or 1998?b) Does any such breach of the Data Protection Acts give rise to a damages claim at the suit of the Claimant?c) Can breaches in relation to DPA requests in 2016 and 2017 cause losses which occurred in the past?d) Which categories of loss alleged by the Claimant occurred after 2017 and what losses, if any, occurred as a result of any such breaches?xii) In relation to any act of the Defendants in relation to the 1988 Documents earlier than the requests in 2016 and 2017:
a) Did the Defendants breach the Data Protection Acts 1984 or 1998?b) Does any such breach of the Data Protection Acts give rise to a damages claim at the suit of the Claimant?c) When did the breach occur?C. Loss of chance
xiii) Without the 1988 Documents, was the Claimant able to mount an effective challenge (that is to say, a challenge with the same probability of success as the chance he claims to have lost) to the tax assessments for tax years 1981/82 and 1986/87 which led to his bankruptcy?
xiv) In particular, would he have been able to mount an effective challenge to the tax assessments at material dates including February/March 1992, April 1998, November 2004 and February 2017 or such other date as the Court finds to be relevant?
a) At each of the material dates, did the Claimant have any other copy of all or any of the 1988 Documents?b) Was the Claimant on each of the material dates otherwise able to reconstruct the information contained in the 1988 Documents from other sources?c) Did the contra spoliatorem principle have the consequence that his chance of success in a challenge to the tax assessments was unaffected by the non-availability of the 1988 Documents?xv) If, on each of the said material dates, the Claimant had had all of the relevant 1988 Documents, would he (on the balance of probabilities) then have mounted a challenge to:
a) the tax assessments for 1981/82 and 1986/87?b) his bankruptcy, including an application to annul it?c) the actions of his trustee in bankruptcy, in particular the sale of the forestry properties?xvi) In the premises, did the Claimant have a chance to challenge (a) the tax assessments, (b) his bankruptcy, or (c) actions of his trustee in bankruptcy but for the non-availability of the 1988 Documents or any of them?
xvii) In relation to any identified loss of a chance, was it a real or substantial chance, that is to say not negligible or minimal? [The Defendants are prepared to concede this point for the purposes of this trial only (i.e. without any admission for the subsequent quantum trial); the Claimant contends that it should be resolved once and for all at the liability trial.][1]
D. Causation of loss
xviii) Was the Claimant advised and/or did he choose, on a date prior to 5 March 1992, not to contest the bankruptcy proceedings?
xix) What steps were open to the Claimant to take to avoid the claimed losses even without the 1988 Documents?
xx) Did the Claimant make reasonable or any efforts to obtain the return of the 1988 Documents prior to the Data Protection Act letters in December 2016 and February 2017, and if not, would it in fact have led to the return of the 1988 Documents to him if he had done so, or done so at an earlier time? Is the Defendant entitled to rely on these matters in relation to causation?
xxi) In the premises, for each loss of a chance identified in (C) above, was the loss of that chance caused by any wrongful act by the Defendants, or was the loss of that chance caused by the Claimant's own actions or inactions?
E. Limitation
xxii) In relation to the claims in conversion or for wrongful interference with goods or as a reversioner, when was the first unequivocal refusal by the Defendants to deliver up the 1988 Documents?
xxiii) If the first unequivocal refusal was earlier than 6 years preceding the issue of the present claim form, aside from the claims under the Data Protection Acts, are any of the Preliminary Issue Claims based on:
a) continuing duties?b) continuous breach of duties (i.e. not susceptible to a limitation challenge), and has any such claim of a continuing breach survived Master Thornett's limitation judgment? If so, was there any continuing duty even after the first unequivocal refusal by the Defendants to deliver up the 1988 Documents?xxiv) Is any claim under the Data Protection Acts relating to earlier acts of the Defendants prior to the 2016 and 2017 DPA requests (see issue 12 above) now outside the standard limitation period applicable to such a claim, given that Master Thornett has ruled that such claims accrued on breach and not on a continuing basis?
xxv) To the extent that any Preliminary Issue Claim by the Claimant has been made outside the standard limitation period applicable to such a claim, is the limitation period extended by section 32 of the Limitation Act 1980 on the basis of deliberate concealment? In this regard:
a) was there deliberate concealment of a fact relevant to the Claimant's cause of action;b) does destruction of the 1988 Documents (if the Court holds destruction has occurred) necessarily amount to deliberate concealment;c) when did the Claimant discover the concealment; andd) when could the Claimant or his agents with reasonable diligence have discovered it?xxvi) In the premises, to what extent are the Preliminary Issue Claims statute barred?
F. Consequential issues for any quantum trial
xxvii) In the event that the Defendants are in principle liable to the Claimant in relation to any of the Preliminary Issue Claims, the issues for the next hearing will be:
a) What is the quantum of the loss caused by any wrongs for which the Court has held the Defendants in principle liable in relation to the Preliminary Issue Claims?b) Is the Claimant entitled to damages in relation to the delivery up claim as of right (Master Thornett having determined that this claim will proceed as a damages claim following a finding the Defendants are unable to deliver up) [or is this damages claim the same as the existing claim for conversion][2]?c) As regards every claim based on the loss of a chance:i) if not resolved at the liability hearing, is the lost chance more than merely speculative?ii) what percentage chance did the Claimant have at the time when his relevant loss occurred, to take relevant action (whether challenging bankruptcy), (1) on the assumption that he had all of the relevant 1988 Documents available to him at such time, and in comparison (2) by reference to the actual documents available to him at such time?(iii)If the Claimant had succeeded in those challenges, what losses would he have avoided, and/or what payment, damages or other compensation would he have received?(iv) In particular, what percentage chance was there that a challenge to the 1986/87 tax assessment would have resulted in a repayment by HMRC to the Claimant?(iv) Are these losses foreseeable and not too remote?d) What further losses (if any) are recoverable (including the claimed aggravated and exemplary damages, and damages under the Data Protection Acts)?
VI THE COURT'S APPROACH TO EVIDENCE
"Credibility' involves wider problems than mere 'demeanour' which is mostly concerned with whether the witness appears to be telling the truth as he now believes it to be … though he is a truthful person telling the truth as he sees it, did he register the intentions of the conversation correctly and, if so has his memory correctly retained them? Also, has his recollection been subsequently altered by unconscious bias or wishful thinking or overmuch discussion of it with others? … a witness, however, honest, rarely persuades a judge that his present recollection is preferable to that which was taken down in writing immediately after … contemporary documents are always of the utmost importance …"
"22. … the best approach for a judge to adopt in the trial of a commercial case is, in my view, to place little if any reliance at all on witnesses' recollections of what was said in meetings and conversations, and to base factual findings on inferences drawn from the documentary evidence and known or probable facts. This does not mean that oral testimony serves no useful purpose – though its utility is often disproportionate to its length. But its value lies largely, as I see it, in the opportunity which cross-examination affords to subject the documentary record to critical scrutiny and to gauge the personality, motivations and working practices of a witness, rather than in testimony of what the witness recalls of particular conversations and events. Above all, it is important to avoid the fallacy of supposing that, because a witness has confidence in his or her recollection and is honest, evidence based on that recollection provides any reliable guide to the truth."
VII THE ISSUES
A. Conversion / wrongful interference with goods
Issue 5: what documents did the Defendants take or receive into their possession from the Claimant in the spring of 1988 (any such documents being referred to as the "1988 Documents")?
Issue 6: What statements have the Defendants made to the Claimant from time to time concerning the fate of the 1988 Documents?
"Mr Gregory tried time and again to get relevant documents only to be rebuffed with excuses. His short letter confirms this and he would be pleased to give evidence. He and I met with the Inland Revenue in April 1998 and were treated very badly, mysteriously all my documents given to them had gone missing."
"in 2004, the Defendant informed the Claimant that the 1988 Documents could not be found".
i) Mr Allcock did not take the 1988 Documents;ii) there is nothing to suggest that he had the 1988 Documents in his possession;
iii) the Defendants still had "cupboards full" of documents in 1995 and there is no reason to suppose they would have been given to Mr Allcock;
iv) the criminal charges in respect of Mr Allcock did not relate to any dealings which he had with the Claimant or with the Claimant's affairs;
v) Mr Allcock was suspended from his employment with the Defendants in 1996 and dismissed in 1997. He would from then not have had the opportunity to dispose of the 1988 Documents.
Issue 7: What on the balance of probabilities has happened to the 1988 Documents? If the Court concludes that they have been destroyed by the Defendants, then on which date, or if that is uncertain, what is the latest date by which it is likely that they were destroyed?
Issue 8: In relation to the claims in conversion or for wrongful interference with goods or as a reversioner, has there been an unequivocal refusal by the Defendants to deliver up the 1988 Documents, and if so, when?
i) Whilst at common law there could be no conversion simply by the loss of goods (although there be a liability for breach of bailment), under section 2(2) of the Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977, the bailee in such a situation is now liable to his bailor in conversion: see Clerk & Lindsell on Torts 22nd Ed. para. 17-21;ii) If the goods were not lost, and there was a failure to comply with the request for delivery, then the holding on to the documents whether by saying that they were lost or otherwise is also a conversion. There is a duty to return the goods within a reasonable time of the demand: see Clerk & Lindsell on Torts 22nd Ed. para. 17-23.
"60. "Wrongful retention
Conversion can be committed in a myriad of circumstances. The most relevant category of conversion, for present purposes, is described in Clerk & Lindsell as "wrongful retention" and explained, at §17-22, under the heading "Conversion by keeping or refusal to return", as follows:
"Conversion by keeping: demand and refusal The ordinary way of showing a conversion by unlawful retention of property is to prove that the defendant having it in his possession, refused to surrender it on demand. Indeed such a demand is generally a precondition of the right of action for detention1: the mere unpermitted possession of another's chattel is not as such a conversion of it".
Clerk & Lindsell continues, at §17-24:
"Demand must be unconditional and specific The demand should be unconditional in its terms, .... ,. If the demand is unclear or equivocal, for example because it is merely a request for "immediate commencement of the process of return" of goods, it may not be enough."
Then at §17-25 Clerk & Lindsell deals with refusal as follows:
"Refusal must be unconditional. The refusal must also be unconditional115. A person on whom a demand for goods is made may not have them immediately available even though they are under his control;... he cannot be required to act at a moment's notice, or refuse at his peril. . .... a person in possession of another's goods has the right to a reasonable opportunity to check whether the person asking for them is really entitled to them."
Footnote 115 highlights the issue in the present case, in the following terms:
"Mires v. Solebay (1678) 2 Mod 242. In Schwarzschild v. Harrods [2008] EWHC 521 (QB)... the court seemingly thought that mere inaction in the face of a demand could not be a refusal, but this must be doubtful. A defendant in possession can hardly be allowed to stymie conversion proceedings by simply doing and saying nothing."
Finally at §17-26, Clerk & Lindsell still under the heading of "wrongful retention" addresses delay as follows:
"Delay in complying with demand. A bailee or person in possession of the goods of another must normally deliver them up forthwith on demand. .... delay in complying with the demand will not only render the defendant liable in conversion, but will normally make him an insurer of the goods in respect of all subsequent damage on the basis that he is thereafter in breach of bailment ... . However in the event of doubt as to the claimant's entitlement the defendant is entitled to a reasonable time to make enquiries. ... But, once the reasonable time has elapsed the defendant must hand over the goods. If he does not do so he will be liable in conversion and in addition the goods will be entirely at his risk thereafter."
Mitchell v Ealing LBC [1979] 1 QB 1 is cited as authority for these propositions.
61. Indeed, the case where the goods are lost or destroyed (rather than merely kept) is also identified by Clerk & Lindsell as a distinct category of conversion: see §17-20. At common law, where a defendant, following a demand, failed to return goods, because the goods had been lost or destroyed, the position was as follows. First, if the goods had been lost before demand (or before the lapse of a reasonable time after demand), then the defendant was only liable if the goods were lost as a result of the defendant's own negligence. The claimant had a claim for breach of bailment and also for detinue. Secondly, if the goods had been lost after the lapse of a reasonable time following demand, then the defendant was strictly liable for their loss; here the claimant had, at least, a claim for detinue. This strict liability for loss after demand was commonly referred to "liability as an insurer". Thirdly, in either event, there was no claim for conversion, because there was no voluntary act by the defendant. As a result of the abolition of detinue in the 1977 Act, s.2(2) was introduced to make the bailee liable in (statutory) conversion in this situation."
"80. …the defendant council had agreed to store the claimant's furniture. The claimant then demanded its return and a time and place for delivery was agreed. By mistake, defendant's employee failed to turn up. When the parties turned up on a later agreed date, it was discovered that the furniture had, in the meantime, been stolen. The claimant claimed for the return of the goods or alternatively their value. O'Connor J held the defendant council liable. First, having identified the defendants as gratuitous bailees, he referred to the general principle that such a bailee is bound to deliver up the goods when demand is made and "if the bailee is unable to deliver the goods he is liable for their value unless he can show that they have been lost without negligence or default on his part and again the time of such loss is of importance" (This is the principle referred to in paragraph 61 above). Secondly, he recorded the defendant's case that its failure to turn up on the first date of delivery "cannot be ranked as a refusal to deliver the plaintiff's goods"; it was merely a mistake. The learned judge then cited two leading textbooks on the law of bailment, both of which referred to the concept of "refusal" in the context of conversion. In particular he said (at 8A-C):
"[[Paton] has this to say under the heading "Delay in Returning":
'If the depositee is in mora (i.e. if he improperly refuses to restore the goods), then the goods are held at his peril. This was the rule of civil law, but as the refusal to restore would constitute the tort of detinue, an action for the full value of the chattel would lie at once. Subsequent restitution would merely go to reduction of damages'
The present case it will be seen, does not amount to a refusal. Is then an unequivocal refusal a necessary element before it can be said that he goods are held at the peril of the bailee?"
81. He then referred to the principle that the bailee is not liable if the goods are lost without any default on his part before the demand for return is made, but that, after demand, he is liable, even without fault, if they are lost after the expiry of a reasonable time between demand and occasion for redelivery. He said: "That that is right is plainly supported by other authorities: see, for example Clayton v Le Roy.... It is unnecessary to refer to the facts of that case, but the case on which the plaintiff is really entitled to rely is Shaw & Co v Symmons & Sons [1919] 1 KB 799." After explaining the facts in Shaw, O'Connor J commented on that case (at 9B):
"It will be seen by analogy there was no refusal to deliver the goods in that case. There was merely a delay in complying with the demand and it proved to be inexcusable delay."
On that basis, O'Connor J held that from the moment the defendant failed to turn up at the agreed delivery place, they became insurers of the goods and responsible for their loss thereafter."
Issue 8A: Were the Defendants under a duty to preserve the 1988 Documents indefinitely for the Claimant's benefit and/or return them to him pursuant to either the reasonable understanding of the Claimant or any applicable duty of care; or were the Defendants entitled to destroy those documents in accordance with their retention policies?
Issue 9: In the premises, subject to the issues of loss, causation and limitation below, has the Claimant established the Defendant's prima facie liability for (a) conversion and/or wrongful interference with goods; (b) damage to the Claimant's reversionary interest in the 1988 Documents?
B. Data Protection Act claims
i) Claims for breach of the Data Protection principles in the event of the loss or destruction of the 1988 Documents; and
ii) Claims for failure to comply with requests made under the Data Protection Acts on 23 December 2016 and 7 February 2017.
Issue 10(a): Were the Defendants under a duty under that legislation to return the 1988 Documents to the Claimant and, if so, when?
Issue 10(b): Were the Defendants under a duty under that legislation to preserve the 1988 Documents until so returned?
Issue 10(c): Were the Defendants at any time entitled to and/or under an obligation to destroy the 1988 Documents in accordance with their retention policies applicable to the Defendants' own documents?
Issue 10(d): If so, what retention policies were applicable to the 1988 Documents, and on what date did the Defendants become entitled to and/or under an obligation to destroy them pursuant to any applicable retention policy?
Issue 10(e): Was the Defendant required to give notice to the Claimant of an impending destruction? If so, did the Defendant duly give notice to the Claimant of impending destruction?
Issue 10(f): Were any of the Defendants' relevant duties modified by any request from the Claimant for the return of the documents or any statements made to him as to their availability?
Issue 11(a): In response to the DPA Requests made in 2016 and 2017, did the Defendant breach the Data Protection Acts 1984 or 1998?
Issue 11(b): Does any such breach of the Data Protection Acts give rise to a damages claim at the suit of the Claimant?
Issue 11(c): Can breaches in relation to DPA requests in 2016 and 2017 cause losses which occurred in the past?
Issue 11(d): Which categories of loss alleged by the Claimant occurred after 2017 and what losses, if any, occurred as a result of any such breaches?
Issue 12(a): In relation to any act of the Defendants in relation to the 1988 Documents earlier than the requests in 2016 and 2017, did the Defendants breach the Data Protection Acts 1984 or 1998?
Issue 12(b): Does any such breach of the Data Protection Acts give rise to a damages claim at the suit of the Claimant?
Issue 12(c): When did the breach occur?
C Loss of chance
Issue 13: Without the 1988 Documents, was the Claimant able to mount an effective challenge (that is to say, a challenge with the same probability of success as the chance he claims to have lost) to the tax assessments for tax years 1981/82 and 1986/87 which led to his bankruptcy?
Issue 14: In particular, would he have been able to mount an effective challenge to the tax assessments at material dates including February/March 1992, April 1998, November 2004 and February 2017 or such other date as the Court finds to be relevant?
a) At each of the material dates, did the Claimant have any other copy of all or any of the 1988 Documents?
b) Was the Claimant on each of the material dates otherwise able to reconstruct the information contained in the 1988 Documents from other sources?
c) Did the contra spoliatorem principle have the consequence that his chance of success in a challenge to the tax assessments was unaffected by the non-availability of the 1988 Documents?
"In the cases as to spoliation of documents, the point has frequently arisen on the preliminary hearing on documents, and the question has been debated whether or not further proof should be allowed. This point cannot arise under the present procedure, and it may be that in some respects the old doctrine was rather technical. The substance of it, however, remains and is as forcible now as ever, and it is applicable not merely in prize cases, but to almost all kinds of disputes. If any one by a deliberate act destroys a document which, according to what its contents may have been, would have told strongly either for him or against him, the strongest possible presumption arises that if it had been produced it would have told against him, and even if the document is destroyed by his own act, but under circumstances in which the intention to destroy evidence may fairly be considered rebutted, still he has to suffer. He is in the position that he is without the corroboration which might have been expected in his case."
Issue 15: If, on each of the said material dates, the Claimant had had all of the relevant 1988 Documents, would he (on the balance of probabilities) then have mounted a challenge to:
a) the tax assessments for 1981/82 and 1986/87?
b) his bankruptcy, including an application to annul it?
c) the actions of his trustee in bankruptcy, in particular the sale of the forestry properties?
i) The Claimant did not seek to mount a challenge before he became bankrupt in 1992. It is not an answer that he was defending VAT proceedings or prosecuting judicial review proceedings in 1988. At this time, he had access to the documents referred to in the section "What happened to the Claimant's documents", and it would have been within his power to have made the challenge.ii) He became bankrupt on the petition of the Defendants. On the balance of probabilities, he had knowledge of the petition at least by 5 March 1992, the date of the bankruptcy. There is set out above the numerous occasions evidencing that he had notice of the bankruptcy proceedings including:
a. Statements in his bail application to the effect that he had been served with the bankruptcy petitionb. He instructed solicitors to appear at the hearing of the petition.c. He acknowledged service in a statement to the Insolvency Service in April 1992d. In 1993, his solicitors Burton Copeland acknowledged that he had been served whilst in prisone. In 1995, his agent Peter Gregory acknowledged that the Claimant had told him that he had been served whilst in prison.iii) He did not thereafter act promptly, for example, by seeking an annulment (that would take more than 25 years). This was despite his having access to the documents referred to in the section "What happened to the Claimant's documents". Nor did he take proceedings before the Commissioners to seek to set aside assessments for many years thereafter culminating in the hearing in November 2004.
iv) He did not seek the recovery of the 1988 Documents for years until Mr Gregory sought to recover them.
Issue 16: In the premises, did the Claimant have a chance to challenge (a) the tax assessments, (b) his bankruptcy, or (c) actions of his trustee in bankruptcy but for the non-availability of the 1988 Documents or any of them?
Issue 17: In relation to any identified loss of a chance, was it a real or substantial chance, that is to say not negligible or minimal? [The Defendants are prepared to concede this point for the purposes of this trial only (i.e. without any admission for the subsequent quantum trial); the Claimant contends that it should be resolved once and for all at the liability trial.][3]
D Causation of loss
Issue 18: Was the Claimant advised and/or did he choose, on a date prior to 5 March 1992, not to contest the bankruptcy proceedings?
(1) Solicitors attended on the hearing of the bankruptcy petition, according to a handwritten recital on the bankruptcy order;(2) he made a statement in connection with a bail application upon his return to the UK in the weeks before the bankruptcy hearing, saying that he had been served with the bankruptcy petition and he had been at that point in time advised not to oppose it (it was not signed, but it also contain a detailed statement of his assets);
(3) there is a handwritten document dated 7 April 1992 containing his signature (apparently on each page, but at least on the last page) and his initials in the margins for alterations. It is so specific about having been served with a statutory demand whilst imprisoned in America. He cannot know that this was supposed to have happened unless he was served there.
(4) As noted above, Mr Harverd referred to his having been served in prison, as did Burton Copeland. More specifically, the Claimant's agent Mr Gregory told Burton Copeland that the Claimant had informed Mr Gregory that the Claimant had been served with a statutory demand whilst in prison.
"Mr Ramsden's unconvincing statement almost 30 years later that this was an "after the fact" document was a desperate attempt to explain away a straightforward document which he knew was fatal to his claim and called into question both the position he took in the annulment proceedings and the evidence he has filed in these proceedings (e.g. paragraphs 69 and 71 of his WS in which he claims to have been unaware of the petition and that he would have challenged it if he had been aware of it)."
Issue 19: What steps were open to the Claimant to take to avoid the claimed losses even without the 1988 Documents?
Issue 20: Did the Claimant make reasonable or any efforts to obtain the return of the 1988 Documents prior to the Data Protection Act letters in December 2016 and February 2017, and if not, would it in fact have led to the return of the 1988 Documents to him if he had done so, or done so at an earlier time? Is the Defendant entitled to rely on these matters in relation to causation?
Issue 21: In the premises, for each loss of a chance identified in (C) above, was the loss of that chance caused by any wrongful act by HMRC, or was the loss of that chance caused by the Claimant's own actions or inactions?
E Limitation
Issue 22: In relation to the claims in conversion or for wrongful interference with goods or as a reversioner, when was the first unequivocal refusal by the Defendants to deliver up the 1988 Documents?
Issue 23: If the first unequivocal refusal was earlier than 6 years preceding the issue of the present claim form, aside from the claims under the Data Protection Acts, are any of the Preliminary Issue Claims based on:(a) continuing duties?
(b) continuous breach of duties (i.e. not susceptible to a limitation challenge), and has any such claim of a continuing breach survived Master Thornett's limitation judgment? If so, was there any continuing duty even after the first unequivocal refusal by the Defendants to deliver up the 1988 Documents?
"In the case of conversion, the causal requirements follow from the nature of the tort. The tort exists to protect proprietary or possessory rights in property; it is committed by an act inconstant with those rights and it is a tort of strict liability. So conversion is a "taking with the intent of exercising over the chattel an ownership inconsistent with the real owner's right of possession": per Rolfe B. in Fouldes v Willoughby (1841) 8 M & W 540, 550. And the person who takes is treated as being under a continuing strict duty to restore the chattel to its owner."
"Moreover, in the light of sections 2 and 3 of the Act it may now be more appropriate to regard a temporary interference with goods of the kind that occurred in this case as a new form of continuing conversion."
"Conversion is now governed by the Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977. The changes made by the Act, particularly s.2(2), which are consequent upon the Act's abolition of the concept of detinue, extend the right of action for conversion to those cases of detinue which did not previously give rise to an action in conversion. The action for conversion is an action in tort for the purposes of limitation, so that the period of limitation is prima facie six years from the date on which the cause of action accrues, as provided by s.2 of the 1980 Act. That date will normally be the date of the wrongful interference with the plaintiff's goods."
Issue 24: Is any claim under the Data Protection Acts relating to earlier acts of the Defendants prior to the 2016 and 2017 DPA requests (see issue 12 above) now outside the standard limitation period applicable to such a claim, given that Master Thornett has ruled that such claims accrued on breach and not on a continuing basis?
Issue 25: To the extent that any Preliminary Issue Claim by the Claimant has been made outside the standard limitation period applicable to such a claim, is the limitation period extended by section 32 of the Limitation Act 1980 on the basis of deliberate concealment? In this regard:
(a) was there deliberate concealment of a fact relevant to the Claimant's cause of action;
(b) does destruction of the 1988 Documents (if the Court holds destruction has occurred) necessarily amount to deliberate concealment;
(c) when did the Claimant discover the concealment; and
(d) when could the Claimant or his agents with reasonable diligence have discovered it?
(1) Subject to subsection (3) 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…."
Issue 26: In the premises, to what extent are the Preliminary Issue Claims statute barred?
F Final issue
VIII CONCLUSION
Note 1 The issue in square brackets is not agreed. [Back]