S6 Lismore Builders Ltd (In Receivership) v Bank of Ireland Finance Ltd & ors [2013] IESC 6 (08 February 2013)


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Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions


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Cite as: [2013] IESC 6

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Judgment Title: Lismore Builders Limited (In Receivership) v Bank of Ireland Finance Limited & ors

Neutral Citation: [2013] IESC 6

Supreme Court Record Number: 363 & 364/2006

High Court Record Number: 1990 5939 P & 1990 5724 P

Date of Delivery: 08/02/2013

Court: Supreme Court

Composition of Court: Denham C.J., Hardiman J., MacMenamin J.

Judgment by: MacMenamin J.

Status of Judgment: Approved

Judgments by
Link to Judgment
Result
Concurring
MacMenamin J.
Appeal allowed - set aside High Court Order
Denham C.J., Hardiman J.


Outcome: Allow And Set Aside





THE SUPREME COURT

Denham C.J.
Hardiman J.
MacMenamin J.
S.C. APPEAL NO. 363/2006
      BETWEEN:
LISMORE BUILDERS LIMTIED (IN RECEIVERSHIP)
PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT
AND
BANK OF IRELAND FINANCE LIMITED, DELOITTE HASKINS AND SELLS

DEFENDANTS/RESPONDENTS

and

THE SUPREME COURT
S.C. APPEAL NO. 364/2006
      BETWEEN:
LISMORE HOMES LIMITED (IN RECEIVERSHIP)
PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT
AND
BANK OF IRELAND FINANCE LIMITED, DELOITTE HASKINS AND SELLS

DEFENDANTS/RESPONDENTS


JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice MacMenamin dated the 8th day of February 2013.

1. On the 30th June, 2006, the High Court (Quirke J.) delivered judgment in the two proceedings which are the subject of this appeal. He decided to dismiss the claims brought by both plaintiffs (‘the appellants’) herein, by reason of inordinate and inexcusable delay. The appellants, (collectively “the Lismore companies”) have appealed that decision. For brevity, the appellant in the first action will also be referred to as “Builders”; the appellant in the second action as “Homes”. A further appeal, brought against the High Court judge’s decision to refuse the appellants leave to amend their claim by an amended consolidated statement of claim in both cases, containing additional claims for deceit, conspiracy and misrepresentation, and purporting to quantify the appellants’ damages in the sum of €45,106,108.35, has been withdrawn. However, the existence of this issue in the High Court is relevant to the appeal, in that the High Court judge dealt first in his judgment with the amendment applications and second, the applications to dismiss. This sequencing may well have had a significant bearing on the manner in which the judgment addresses the issues, a point dealt with later in this judgment.

Introduction
2. The procedural background to this litigation is byzantine. The cases, regrettably and reprehensibly in many senses, have been going on now for some 22 years, since the 20th April, 1990. As this judgment explains, however, the entire fault for this does not lie solely with either of the appellants. A detailed analysis is required of the chronology of the cases. This judgment considers the conduct of both the appellants and the respondents to this appeal. It concludes that some of that procedural conduct reflects little credit on the parties. Insofar as blame can be attributed between the parties, the preponderance of the blame can indeed be laid at the appellants’ door; but the respondents also must bear some responsibility. But, even ascribing blame where it lies, the fundamental question remains as to whether, the appellants have been guilty of inordinate and inexcusable delay. It is not sufficient simply to point to the very substantial period of time in question. This judgment must also take into account the systemic delays which occurred, an issue not directly addressed in the High Court judgment. The cases have involved numerous interlocutory hearings, some of them very lengthy, in both the High Court and, on appeal, to this Court. One can infer there were undoubtedly other external factors at play, including the involvement of Mr. James Kennedy, a director of the appellant companies, with the Mahon Planning Tribunal during some of the relevant periods, especially from the year 2002 onwards. It is not the task of this Court in an application of this type to make any comment, adverse or otherwise, on the character or creditworthiness of any potential witness in the cases.

The legal principles applicable
3. The principles applicable to applications of this type are by now well established. They were authoritatively identified in the judgment of this Court in Primor plc v Stokes Kennedy Crowley [1996] 2 IR 459, and recently re-affirmed in Comcast Int. Holdings v Minister for Public Enterprise & ors and Persona Digital Telephony Ltd v Minister for Public Enterprise & ors
[2012] IESC 50. At pp. 475-476 of the judgment in Primor, Hamilton C.J. stated:-


    “The principles of law relevant to the consideration of the issues raised in this appeal may be summarised as follows:—
        (a) the courts have an inherent jurisdiction to control their own procedure and to dismiss a claim when the interests of justice require them to do so;

        (b) it must, in the first instance, be established by the party seeking a dismissal of proceedings for want of prosecution on the ground of delay in the prosecution thereof, that the delay was inordinate and inexcusable;

        (c) even where the delay has been both inordinate and inexcusable the court must exercise a judgment on whether, in its discretion, on the facts the balance of justice is in favour of or against the proceeding of the case;

        (d) in considering this latter obligation the court is entitled to take into consideration and have regard to:

            (i) the implied constitutional principles of basic fairness of procedures,

            (ii) whether the delay and consequent prejudice in the special facts of the case are such as to make it unfair to the defendant to allow the action to proceed and to make it just to strike out the plaintiff's action,

            (iii) any delay on the part of the defendant — because litigation is a two party operation, the conduct of both parties should be looked at,

            (iv) whether any delay or conduct of the defendant amounts to acquiescence on the part of the defendant in the plaintiff's delay,

            (v) the fact that conduct by the defendant which induces the plaintiff to incur further expense in pursuing the action does not, in law, constitute an absolute bar preventing the defendant from obtaining a striking out order but is a relevant factor to be taken into account by the judge in exercising his discretion whether or not to strike out the claim, the weight to be attached to such conduct depending upon all the circumstances of the particular case,

            (vi) whether the delay gives rise to a substantial risk that it is not possible to have a fair trial or is likely to cause or have caused serious prejudice to the defendant,

            (vii) the fact that the prejudice to the defendant referred to in (vi) may arise in many ways and be other than that merely caused by the delay, including damage to a defendant's reputation and business.”

4. These applications are not brought to dismiss the claims for abuse of process. In the exercise of its inherent jurisdiction to dismiss for delay, by way of clarification, a court must enquire, first, whether there has been inordinate delay on the part of the plaintiff; second, whether that delay is inexcusable; and then, but only then, third, whether, applying the balance of justice test, it is proper that the Court should exercise its inherent jurisdiction to dismiss the claim. In engaging in this process, a High Court judge will be exercising a high degree of discretion. But that discretion must be exercised in accordance with the principles identified including the sequence of such issues. Although great deference will normally be granted to the views of a trial judge, this Court retains the jurisdiction of exercising its discretion in a different manner in an appropriate case. This is especially so, of course, in the event there are errors detectable in the approach adopted in the High Court. The interests of justice are fundamental. This is clear from the judgment of Geoghegan J. in Desmond v. MGN [2009] 1 IR 737, where he states at pp. 742-743:-

    “The expression "discretionary order" can cover a huge variety of orders, some of them involving substantive rights and others being merely procedural in nature including mundane day to day procedural orders, such as orders for adjournments etc. I think that in reality over the years since In bonis Morelli; Vella v. Morelli this court has exercised common sense in relation to that issue. The court would be very slow indeed to interfere with the High Court Judge's management of his or her list, but in a case such as this particular case where much more substantial issues are at stake the court, while having respect for the view of the High Court Judge, must seriously consider whether in all the circumstances and in the interests of justice it should re-exercise the discretion in a different direction.”


The onus of proof
5. A further principle, also set out in Primor, is that the onus of proof lies upon the party asserting delay. Therefore, the onus falls on the respondents in this appeal. But at one part of the judgment, the learned High Court judge stated:-

    “I am satisfied that where there has been inordinate delay on the part of a plaintiff in prosecuting a claim against a defendant, there is an onus upon that plaintiff to offer an explanation by way of evidence or argument or both demonstrating that the delay has been excusable in the circumstances. I am satisfied that such an onus lie upon Homes in these proceedings. I am not satisfied that Homes has discharged that onus.”

    It is said by the respondents that this passage is unrepresentative of the approach adopted generally in the judgment. I do not agree. I think that in this the learned trial judge erred. Here, and at a number of other points in the judgment, he appeared to approach matters as if the primary onus of proof in this application before him lay upon the appellants, who were of course the respondents to the motion. At a number of points, he observed that the appellants were unable to justify or explain steps that they took in a context which again conveys the clear impression that that primary onus lay upon those appellants to explain delays which undoubtedly occurred in the cases. This error is explicable in light of the fact that the appellants, as the moving parties in the application to amend the statement of claim, went first at the High Court hearing. The onus lay upon them in that application to justify the granting of leave to amend and to consolidate. But the onus of proof in applications to dismiss for inordinate and inexcusable delay lies upon the moving party (here the respondents) to demonstrate that the delay was inordinate and inexcusable; not the converse. The error is entirely understandable, but it is highly material.


6. At the core of these appeals, there lies one simple central point. The Primor tests are sequential. A significant part of the learned High Court judge’s judgment amounted to a sustained, and, be it said, often justified, criticism of the appellants’ conduct in the proceedings. He castigated them for “contumelious conduct”, and cited persuasive authority to the effect that:-

    “…a series of separate inordinate and inexcusable delays in complete disregard of the rules of court and with full awareness of the consequences can also properly be regarded as contumelious conduct or if not that, to an abuse of the process of the court…” (per Parker LJ in Culbert v Westwell and Company [1992] 2 P.I.Q.R. 54)

    He held that, prima facie, a delay of (then) sixteen years between the commencement of proceedings and the trial of those proceedings was inordinate, and that the delays were inexcusable. He also held in light of that elapse of time, prejudice should be presumed. In this computation, the judge included periods in excess of seven years while appeals were pending in the court system. This was, by any standard, a substantial period of the time elapse. Absent very unusual circumstances, I am not persuaded that, in this case at least, it was appropriate to include such delays in the computation of time. Regrettably, then and later, such delays were significant.


7. The question for consideration here is whether the appellants were guilty of that inordinate delay, and whether delay for which they were responsible was inexcusable. This judgment concludes that the High Court judge erred in his application of the two tests.

Extraneous considerations
8. In light of this conclusion, strictly speaking it might not be necessary to consider the application of the third, Primor, balance of justice test. However, were it necessary to do so, I consider that the learned trial judge also erred in taking into account an extraneous consideration in the assessment of where the balance of justice lay. A significant part of the judgment was directed to the question as to whether Mr. James Kennedy, a director of the two companies, and who was then said to be resident outside the jurisdiction in Gibraltar, was prepared to come into the jurisdiction to testify as to his negotiations and communications with the respondents before, during and after a receiver to the Lismore companies was appointed in February 1989. The failure of the appellants to challenge the allegation that Mr. Kennedy intended to remain outside the jurisdiction for the foreseeable future, was referred to, in the judgment appealed against, not as being determinative, but as a fact which “could not be ignored” and which formed part of “the overall factual matrix for consideration by the court in its determination”. In my view, this was an extraneous and immaterial consideration Were it necessary to do so, I would point out that, in these cases the High Court was not addressing a situation where the sole witness as to fact on the appellants’ side was unavailable, a situation where, potentially, a question of abuse of court process might arise. The appellants are limited liability companies. On the facts here, how, and in what manner, evidence would be adduced in the prosecution of the claims was not a material consideration in the balance of justice test. As it happened, Mr. James Kennedy was in court for the entirety of the appeal hearing.

Was there actual prejudice?
9. I would also add that even were the balance of justice test to be considered, the fact is that this is a case where, even despite the extraordinary period of time which has elapsed, the respondents have found it difficult to demonstrate actual prejudice arising from the absence or unavailability of centrally important witnesses. It is true that one witness, said to be of relevance to the case, is now unfortunately deceased. However, it has not been said that any other of the many persons directly and centrally engaged are unavailable or have no memory of the events. I would add that no irretrievable actual prejudice is alleged. It is impossible at this point to determine the extent to which this may be said to be a ‘documents case’ and, thus, this could not have come into the balance.

10. But this test does not arise unless and until it has been established that the delay has been inordinate and inexcusable. This point is critical in these appeals. In applications of this type, misconduct may be considered as part of the balance of justice. Such conduct will obviously arise in an application to dismiss for abuse of court process.

11. Some of the procedural stances adopted by both sides here seem to have been motivated more by perceived tactical advantage in a procedural war of attrition, rather than by any desire to get the proceedings back on a firm footing. By way of illustration, at one point early in the proceedings, the respondents sought to consolidate the two sets of proceedings. Ill advisedly, the appellants resisted the applications. Years later, the appellants sought to remedy the situation, by themselves applying to consolidate the proceedings. Yet, by then, the respondents objected to the application on grounds which can only be described as technical.

Payment of security for costs
12. There are further unusual and distinguishing factors to this case. The appellants, in response to the orders for security for costs made by the courts, have actually paid in to court a total sum in excess of €500,000 by way of security for costs in the two cases. This is not easily reconcilable with their characterisation, both in the High Court judgment and by the respondents in this appeal, as being unwilling finally to prosecute the cases to hearing. The High Court judgment did not appear to attach significant weight to this feature. This, by any standards, should have been an important consideration, albeit not conclusive.

13. For the reasons which are set out herein, therefore, I conclude that these cases are to be seen as, to an extent, standing on their own unusual facts and arising in a situation where, despite the elapses of time which have undoubtedly occurred, the delay is excusable. The claim, therefore, should not be dismissed, but rather steps should immediately be taken to expedite, and ensure an early hearing in a manner most appropriate to deal with a very substantial claim in the most expeditious way.

The nature of the claim
14. As a preface to what follows, it is necessary to explain the substance of the claims; they consist of quite serious allegations against a bank and a firm of accountants in, it is said, prematurely, and without justification, appointing a receiver to the Lismore companies, as a result of which, it is claimed that the companies sustained very substantial losses. There may be very strong answers to the claim. Any views of the evidence in the claim expressed here are tentative and only based on prima facie material. One cannot go further in an interlocutory application. Some of this terrain was first covered in the judgments of this court given in applications for security for costs brought by the respondents as long ago as 1998. This is considered later.

The background circumstances
15. The two appellant companies were owned and controlled by Mr. James Kennedy and his wife. They were engaged in a building programme; the plaintiff in the first action, “Homes”, being a landholding company; the plaintiff in the second action, “Builders”, being the building company. The two actions arose out of the development of lands at Weston Park, Newcastle, Co. Dublin. The first named defendant/respondent, (“the Bank”), financed the appellants’ building operation there. However, in February 1989, Homes and Builders were unable to meet their liabilities as they fell due, and the Bank called in its loan. The Lismore Companies claim that after the Bank had consulted with the second named defendants/respondents (“Deloitte”), a new agreement was entered into between the Bank and both Lismore Companies, under which the former was to provide additional finance to enable the companies to complete their building programme. As long as there was money due and owing from the companies on foot of the loan, it is claimed that the Bank was to be entitled to insist on the appointment of, respectively, a quantity surveyor, an auctioneer and a financial controller. The quantity surveyor was Brendan Merry and Partners Limited, the auctioneers were PB Gunne (Dublin) Limited (both originally joined as defendants), but who have both now been dismissed out of the proceedings as has the receiver Bernard Somers.

16. It is said that in accordance with this arrangement, an employee of Deloitte, although not a qualified accountant, became the financial controller of the Lismore companies at the (even now) very substantial salary of £2,750 per week. The companies did not prosper. On the 26th September, 1989, the Bank appointed Bernard Somers to be the receiver over the two properties of the two plaintiffs. The appellant companies claimed originally that the Bank, Deloitte, the quantity surveyors, and the auctioneers managed the affairs of the companies so badly that they ran the business into the ground. They claimed that Mr Somers, the fifth defendant, sold the companies’ assets at an undervalue. All this has yet to be established.

The two proceedings
17. In order to initiate the claim, the appellants, presumably on advice, thought it appropriate to institute two entirely independent proceedings. This step was entirely misconceived. As Barrington J. pointed out in the appeal before this Court on the 11th February, 1998:-


    “Why the plaintiffs thought it appropriate to institute independent proceedings in the High Court I do not know. All the matters complained could be resolved in one action and the institution of two independent sets of proceedings can only increase the costs of the litigation to all parties.” (see Lismore Homes Limited (in Receivership) v Bank of Ireland Finance Limited, Deloitte Haskins and Sells, Brendan Merry and Partners, PB Gunne (Dublin) Limited and Bernard Somers; Lismore Builders (In Receivership) v Bank of Ireland Finance Limited, Deloitte Haskins and Sells, Brendan Merry and Partners, PB Gunne (Dublin) Limited and Brendan Somers [1999] 1 I.R. 501 at p. 505)

In his dissenting judgment in the same appeal, Lynch J. stated, in blunt terms, that the only possible motivation for the initiation of the two separate sets of proceedings was to put pressure on the defendants by the threat of incurring two very substantial sets of costs. In itself, this is not a sufficient ground to dismiss the claim.

18. I turn then to the sequence of events.

A chronology of events
19. A key issue in the chronology here is the fact that, in law, a litigant is entitled, as of right, to appeal an adverse High Court decision to this Court. The law at present establishes no evidential threshold for any notice of appeal to be filed. It will be seen that both sides availed of that constitutional right. It is an unfortunate fact that the exercise of this right has had the consequence of creating periods of delay.

20. The plenary summonses herein were issued on the 20th April, 1990. The Bank entered its appearances on the 16th May, 1990. On the 18th May, 1990, Messrs A&L Goodbody entered appearances for Deloitte. On the 18th September, 1990, Homes and Builders served their plenary summonses on the solicitors for the fourth named defendant, who undertook to enter an appearance. On the 10th October, 1990, both Homes and Builders served plenary summons on solicitors for the third named defendant, who also undertook to enter an appearance. On the 1st November, 1990, the appellants served their plenary summons on the solicitors for the fifth named defendant, who also undertook to enter an appearance.

21. On the 8th March, 1991, the solicitors for the third named defendant, Brendan Merry, issued motions for security for costs against Builders. On the 8th April, 1991, Homes and Builders both delivered their statements of claim. On the 10th June, 1991, the Bank issued notices for particulars arising from the two statements of claim. On the 15th July, 1991, Homes and Builders brought motions seeking discovery against all the then defendants. These motions were, apparently, adjourned from time to time and, on the 30th July, 1992, the motions were adjourned generally with liberty to re-enter. The initiation of two sets of proceedings was not the only procedural irregularity. Having unnecessarily issued two sets of proceedings, the appellants then brought motions for discovery prior to any of the defendants filing their defences. This is not in accord with normal procedure.

The applications for security of costs
22. As outlined earlier, the third named defendant brought a motion for security for costs. On the 29th August, 1991, the Bank followed suit, and issued a motion seeking the same relief against both Homes and Builders. Deloitte adopted the same course on the 18th October, 1991. So too, on the 4th November, 1991, did PB Gunne, the fourth named defendants. To that point nothing was unusual about the speed of the proceedings. But the delays caused by processing these security applications in the High Court, and the appeals therefrom, were very significant, amounting to some six years.

The orders of Keane J. on the 2nd March, 1992
23. The motions for security for costs were at hearing for four days, between the 4th and 7th February, 1992. On the 2nd March, 1992, Keane J. delivered judgment thereon, and ordered both Homes and Builders to provide security for costs to the Bank, Deloitte, Brendan Merry and Partners and PB Gunne. He refused Brendan Somers’ application for security. It is unnecessary to go into this in detail, other than to mention that on appeal, the receiver did obtain an order for security in the sum of €250,000, which was never paid. As pointed out earlier, Mr Somers was dismissed out of the proceedings in 2004.

24. After Keane J.’s order aforesaid, the two sets of proceedings moved out of step with each other. This procedural disjunction was never truly remedied. As a consequence, the proceedings remained “out of kilter” and delays in one, fed into, and caused delays in the other. Much of the fault for this must, of course, be laid at the appellants’ door. They had chosen to initiate the two separate sets of proceedings. Many of the confused and misconceived steps described here took place in an era before active case management. If ever there were cases requiring robust case management, these were those cases. It is noteworthy however that no party even saw fit to bring a motion for directions under the Rules of the Superior Courts 1986, a course of action which was open to them even then.

Appeals against Keane J.’s orders
25. On the 14th April, 1992, Builders appealed against Keane J.’s order directing it to furnish security to the Bank and Deloitte but, unaccountably, Homes did not appeal. Bizarrely, on the same date the 14th April, 1992, Homes and Builders both appealed against Keane J.’s order that they furnish security for costs to the third named defendants, Brendan Merry and Partners, and to PB Gunne, the fourth named defendants. On the same date, Homes brought a motion to the Master of the High Court to fix the amount of the security ordered in favour of the Bank and Deloitte. From today’s perspective, it is very difficult now to discern any logical rationale for the decision to so segregate the two proceedings, other than some opaquely perceived tactical advantage, or a view perhaps that one company had a stronger cause of action or a more readily identifiable loss than the other.

Deloitte’s application to consolidate the proceedings while the Homes appeal was pending before this court - Keane J.’s order of the 30th July, 1992

26. On the 27th May, 1992, Deloitte brought a motion before the High Court seeking to consolidate the two proceedings which had been brought by Homes and Builders. A similar motion was brought by the Bank on the 16th June, 1992. The Lismore companies objected to this application. It will be remembered that, by this point, the two proceedings had become separated, and, by then, the appeal brought by Homes was pending before this Court. Unsurprisingly, therefore, in the light of this unsatisfactory situation, Keane J. on the 30th July, 1992, ordered that while the actions could not be actually consolidated, they should be nonetheless tried together; that all further proceedings in the Homes action against the Bank and Deloitte be stayed pending lodgement of security for costs in favour of those defendants; and, further, that all subsequent proceedings in the Homes action as against the third defendant, Brendan Merry and Partners, the fourth defendant, PB Gunne (Dublin) Limited, and the fifth defendant, Bernard Somers, the receiver, be stayed pending the determination of the appeals to the Supreme Court. That judge also ordered that all further proceedings in the Builders proceeding be stayed “pending the determination of all appeals to the Supreme Court by the plaintiff” in respect of the security for costs orders made on the 2nd March, 1992. He also ordered that the motions for discovery, brought by Homes and Builders, be adjourned generally with liberty to re-enter.

Builders decide to appeal Keane J.’s order of the 30th July, 1992, linking, but not consolidating, the two proceedings
27. By this point, matters became yet further complicated by virtue of the fact that Builders appealed Keane J.’s order, directing that the Homes and Builders proceedings be linked. It is impossible to fathom the reason for this step. As a point for future reference, it is relevant to point out, however, that as of that date (the 14th September, 1992), both Homes and Builders, had appeals pending before this Court albeit on different issues. For a further period of three years (a total of six years), while both these appeals were pending before this Court, no significant steps were taken in either proceedings.

Homes applies to extend the time to appeal Keane J.’s order of the 2nd March, 1992
28. However, on the 16th March, 1995, Homes, which had not appealed Keane J.’s orders made on the 2nd March, 1992, brought a motion before the Supreme Court seeking an extension of time within which to appeal that order. The application was heard on the 31st March, 1995, and this Court refused Homes’ application. Yet, both Homes and Builders still had other appeals, on other issues pending before this Court.

Builders’ Supreme Court appeal of Keane J.’s order directing payment of security for costs
29. On the 11th February, 1998, this Court dealt with Builders’ appeal against Keane J.’s order for security for costs made in favour of the Bank and Deloitte on the 30th July, 1992. It must be accepted, unfortunately, that a period of six years had elapsed between the time Keane J. delivered judgment on the question of security and the appeal against that order coming on before this Court. I do not believe that Builders can be held culpable for that period of delay. Nor do I think that this or any other unfortunate instances of system delay here can be simply factored out of the equation. The High Court judgment did not address this issue. In fact, the calculation of time made in that judgment did not factor in the periods during which relevant appeal issues were pending.

30. This Court allowed Builders’ appeal against the security for costs orders which had been made in favour of the Bank and Deloitte; but dismissed appeals brought by Homes and Builders requiring them to give security for costs to the third named defendant, Brendan Merry, and to PB Gunne, the fourth named defendant.

This Court’s observations on the appeal in 1998
31. It is necessary now briefly to address Barrington J.’s consideration of the issues in the 1998 appeal. He emphasised that his observations were preliminary ones, based entirely on the untested affidavits before him. However, his tentative view was that as a condition of its advance to Builders, the Bank had insisted on a member of Deloitte becoming financial controller of Builders. As a consequence, he stated that the Bank, through Deloitte, actually controlled Homes from the date of that advance, made in February 1989, until the appointment of Bernard Somers some seven months later. He expressed the view that Deloitte made a report on the condition of Builders to the Bank before the Bank made its advance, so that when it accepted the creation of the position of financial controller, prima facie it knew, or ought to have known what it was getting into. He was of the view that at that interlocutory stage, Builders had made out a prima facie case that it was the acts of the two respondents’, which were responsible for Builders inability to pay the costs in the event of being successful in the proceedings. However, he immediately went on to point out that at the plenary hearing, both the Bank and the accountants might be able to show that Builders, or its directors, had misled them as to their financial state. Barron J. agreed with Barrington J.’s judgment. Lynch J., however, dissented from these views, stating that the allegations made by Builders against the Bank and Deloitte were no more than bald allegations without any substantial evidence to support the proposition that the appellants’ inabilities to pay the defendants’ costs, if they were successful in their defences, were brought about by the very wrongs complained of by them against their defendants. These are matters for another day.

32. However, in summary, it must be accepted that up to the 11th February, 1998, a delay of up to almost six years was attributable to lapse of time while appeals were pending in the court system. In light of the outcome of the appeal, it cannot be said they were without merit.

How the delays were characterised in the judgment of the High Court
33. I am unable, therefore, to agree with that portion of the judgment appealed against where the learned High Court judge characterised the six year period between the 2nd March, 1992, and the 11th of March, 1998, as having been largely, dominated by “procedural matters” relating largely to the issue of security for costs, or his observation that:-


    “…no evidence was adduced that Homes was concerned by this very substantial delay, or took any steps to reduce the extent of that delay. The same can of course be said of the Bank and Deloittes, (and the other defendants). However as indicated earlier, the obligation to prosecute a claim of this kind rests principally on the plaintiff.”

I find it difficult to identify precisely the nature of the added duty or onus on the appellants when the matter was awaiting hearing on appeal or the procedural steps which should have been taken arising from such a duty. In hindsight, it would undoubtedly have served them better if they had been seen to apply for priority for the appeal but there were clearly extensive delays in the system then. Neither party made such an application. It is unclear what the result of such an application would have been. All this must also be seen in the context of Keane J.’s order restraining Homes from prosecuting its claim against the Bank pending the resolution of its appeals before the Supreme Court, and the fact that the appeals were pending at that time. Up to the year 1998, therefore, I do not believe that it was legitimate to conclude that either Homes or Builders had in fact been guilty of inordinate and inexcusable delay. Undoubtedly, the delay in itself was inordinate but this is not to say that appellants had been responsible for it, or that it was inexcusable. The High Court judge concluded that the elapse of time placed an added onus on the appellants to press on the proceedings. In my view, insofar as the judgment took this period into account at all, I think it was in error.

The sequencing of the Primor tests
34. I think that here, and at other points elsewhere in the judgment of the High Court, there was an undue and incorrect emphasis on issues appertaining to the appellants’ conduct which, although potentially very relevant to the balance of justice, meant that insufficient regard was paid to the first two elements of the test. I agree with the judgment of Fennelly J. in Anglo Irish Beef Processors Ltd. v Montgomery [2002] 3 IR 510 when he observed at p. 518:-

It is always necessary for the defendant applicant to demonstrate, and he bears that burden, that the plaintiff has been guilty of inordinate and inexcusable delay. Subject to that, however, the court should aim at a global appreciation of the interests of justice and should balance all the considerations as they emerge from the conduct of and the interests of all the parties to the litigation. The separate considerations mentioned by Hamilton C.J. should not be treated as distinct cumulative tests but as related matters affecting the central decision as to what is just.” (emphasis added)

Any balance of justice considerations must hinge on inordinate and inexcusable delay being established as a condition precedent. Undoubtedly, the plaintiffs’ conduct of proceedings can be taken into account in a consideration of ‘all the circumstances of the case’, but as a prior condition to a weighing of the balance, there must be an analysis of whether there was, actually, inordinate and inexcusable delay on the part of the appellants.

35. Somewhat different considerations arise in the context of the next period to be considered from the 11th February, 1998, onwards to the issuing of the notices of motion to dismiss.

What transpired between the Supreme Court judgment of the 11th May, 1998, and the initiation of this motion to dismiss for want of prosecution on the 25th February, 2005
36. For more than a year after the 1998 Supreme Court judgment, the appellants did not take any steps. They may be subject to legitimate criticism for this delay. But this one year delay is not, in itself, a basis for making such a radical order as to dismiss the proceedings. They were moved to action on the 25th May, 1999, when Deloitte issued a notice of intention to proceed. Unfortunately, the appellants’ reaction to this was entirely misconceived. On the 29th June, 1999, their solicitors wrote to Deloitte’s solicitors, indicating an intention to serve a ‘combined statement of claim’ provided there was no objection. Their intention here, presumably, was to achieve some form of “de facto consolidation” of the two sets of proceedings, arising from the criticisms which had been made in the Supreme Court judgment of the previous year. They had no procedural right to embark on such an unorthodox procedure. But, here, it must be recollected that, on the 27th May, 1992, Deloitte had themselves actually brought a motion to consolidate both the Homes and Builders proceedings. It might be thought that their position might have been to welcome the initiative of the Lismore companies. Regrettably, that was not the position.

The respondents’ reaction to the effort to “merge” the two proceedings
37. Instead, on the 7th July, 1999, Deloitte’s solicitors wrote, reserving their “right to object strongly to any such application.” On behalf of the Bank and Deloitte, it was contended (relying on Keane J.’s judgment linking the proceedings) that the doctrines of res judicata and estoppel applied, and that, further, there would be no saving in time or money given that the proceedings were already linked, if not consolidated. Be that as it may, and accepting as one must, that it was technically open to the respondents to rely on those points, it is nonetheless difficult to reconcile this stance with the position which they had adopted in 1992, or with the specific criticisms made about the two sets of proceedings by each of the members of this Court in the 1998 judgment. It might have been thought that, albeit irregular in a procedural sense, this was an attempt by both Homes and Builders to mend their hand. It is tempting to infer that Deloitte’s view was that the appellants should be made pay the price for their earlier position on the consolidation issue. The existence of the two sets of proceedings, howsoever linked, continued to be a procedural obstacle.

38. In response to this letter, on the 12th July, 1999, Homes’ and Builders’ solicitors reiterated their contention that they intended to serve a combined statement of claim. On the 29th July, 1999, the Bank issued a motion to fix the amount of security for costs to be paid by Homes. On the 6th August, 1999, Deloitte’s solicitors reiterated that they would not consent to, or accept delivery of, a combined statement of claim and, on the 27th October, 1999, they also issued a motion to fix the amount of security for costs to be paid by Homes. In November 1999, Homes withdrew the notice of appeal which it had entered on 14th September, 1992, appealing the decision of Keane J. that Homes and Builders actions be heard linked together. This should have created a situation where, had matters proceeded normally, the Homes action might have been got on with reasonable efforts from both sides. But that was not to be.

39. On the 25th February, 2000, both Homes and Builders again purported to serve, what has been described in submissions, aptly, as, a “blockbuster” “combined amended statement of claim” on behalf of both appellants. They had no leave to do so. No application had been brought to court to consolidate the proceedings. In February and March 2000, all the defendants rejected this document which, as the learned High Court judge in these motions rightly pointed out, was deficient in many respects over the entire of its one hundred and twenty nine pages.

24th March 2000: McCracken J. fixes the amounts of security in the High Court
40. On the 24th March, 2000, McCracken J. in the High Court fixed the amount of security to be lodged by Homes in the sum of Ir£200,000, in each of the Bank and Deloitte cases. This order was appealed. The Bank and Deloitte cross-appealed, asserting that the amount fixed by the High Court judge had been insufficient. On the 2nd June, 2000, the Bank delivered its defence in the Homes proceedings. Over the month of July, 2000, there was correspondence wherein both Homes and Builders indicated a willingness to make discovery, but in the context of their “combined statement of claim”. This was unacceptable, and the discovery did not proceed. On the 5th December, 2000, the Bank issued a letter seeking voluntary discovery against Homes and Builders. On the 21st December, 2000, Homes issued a motion to consolidate the two sets of proceedings, but exhibiting the same one hundred and twenty nine page statement of claim. They did not proceed with this, and on the 29th January, 2001, the motion to consolidate the two claims was struck out with costs reserved. There is much in this conduct by Homes that could be criticised heavily, were that to be the only question to be decided or if it simply fell to consider whether this conduct constituted an abuse of court process. But the question remains would such conduct warrant dismissal outright of the claims or some lesser sanction by way of costs or other orders?

Appeals against McCracken J.’s orders on the amount of the security
41. On the 9th July, 2001, all parties’ appeals against McCracken J.’s orders for security were heard. On the 25th October, 2001, this Court affirmed his orders, and directed the same sum in security to be lodged within eight weeks. Homes failed to comply with this deadline, however, and on the 25th January, 2002, Deloitte issued a motion to strike out the claim by reason of the appellants’ failure to lodge that security. In response, on the 6th February, Homes lodged security in the sum of €253,947.62 in favour of the Bank and of Deloitte. As a consequence, Deloitte’s motion to strike out the proceedings was itself struck out on consent on the 8th April, 2002.

Particulars and discovery motions
42. On the 30th July, 2002, the Bank served a notice for particulars on both Homes and Builders in the proceedings. There was no response to this, and, on the 4th November, 2002, the High Court (Johnson J.) made an order compelling replies to what were very brief notices for particulars directed to quantifying the alleged losses.

43. On the 4th February, 2003, the Master of the High Court directed Homes to make discovery to the Bank and, ultimately, on the 25th June, 2003, Antoinette Kennedy, James Kennedy’s wife and also a director of the two Lismore companies, swore an affidavit of discovery.

44. On the 16th January, 2004, the appeal in relation to Johnson J.’s order directing particulars was heard by this Court. The appellants were directed to provide the particulars within four weeks. The particulars were provided on the 13th February, 2004.

45. On the 1st April, 2004, Homes and Builders withdrew their appeals against the quantum of the security ordered in the case of the third, fourth and fifth named defendants. As a consequence, the Lismore companies became liable for orders for security against each of those three defendants for a total sum of €1,250,000. It is unnecessary to particularise the precise apportionment between the defendants in the light of subsequent events where, ultimately, the claims against each of those defendants was discontinued. On the 1st June, 2004, the proceedings against Brendan Somers too, were discontinued.


Further efforts to merge the two claims
46. On the 22nd October, 2004, the Lismore companies again purported to serve a combined statement of claim. Again, they can be criticised for this, albeit with the same qualifications as outlined earlier. In response, on the 6th October, Deloitte wrote to the Lismore companies’ solicitors rejecting their entitlement to serve a combined statement of claim, and additionally, serving notices of intention to proceed. On the 23rd December, 2004, the Lismore companies issued a motion seeking leave to serve amended statements of claim, now confined to thirty seven pages. That motion came on before Quirke J. as part of matters to be decided by him and on foot of which he delivered the judgment now appealed against. Prior to this appeal, on the 4th May, 2012, the appellants withdrew their appeal against Quirke J.’s refusal to allow them to amend their statement of claim and seeking consolidation.

25th February 2005: Deloitte brings their motion to dismiss
47. On the 3rd March, 2005, the proceedings against PB Gunne were discontinued. On the 25th February, 2005, Deloitte brought their motions to dismiss the proceedings. I consider this to be the terminal date for consideration of the delay period. This was followed by motions to the same effect brought by the Bank on the 4th and 6th April, 2005. These motions were heard by Quirke J. who delivered judgment promptly on the 30th June, 2006, but approximately one year after the date the motions were issued. This delay was not at all the fault of trial judge. In the meantime, on the 27th March, 2006, the proceedings against Brendan Merry and Partners were dismissed without opposition. The blame for the further system delay until the hearing of the appeal giving rise to this judgment cannot be laid at the door of either of the parties.

48. What then were said to be the periods of culpable delay? The learned High Court judge held that, in all the circumstances there was inordinate and inexcusable delay from 11th February, 1998 onwards. In applications of this nature, what is relevant is the extent and proportion of any system delay in the context of the relevant time periods, seen in the round.

The alleged delay from the 11th February 1998
49. I am not convinced that the period of delay was inordinate and inexcusable from the 11th February 1998 onwards for the following reasons. First, until November, 1999, an appeal against Keane J.’s order linking the two proceedings was still pending. Second, from the correspondence, it is clear all parties understood that the onus for bringing on the motion seeking to fix the amount of security for costs in fact lay with the Bank’s solicitors. This motion was heard only on the 23rd March, 2000. The appeals and cross-appeals against McCracken J.’s orders were pending before this Court until the judgment was delivered by this Court on 25th October, 2001. Third, from 4th November 2002 until 16th January 2004, the appeals against Johnson J.’s order compelling replies to particulars, were pending before this Court. Fourth, at all times, there was an extant order that the cases were linked, and stays were in effect to prevent the effect of that order being negated. This then leaves the relatively short period up to the issuing of this motion to dismiss on the 25th February, 2005. In the overall context, this was, again, a relatively short period of just more than one year, during which time there was correspondence between the parties, albeit again on the vexed issue of the Lismore companies’ entitlement to serve an amended statement of claim, making a wide variety of claims including deceit and conspiracy. It is unnecessary to consider this issue however as the appellants have withdrawn this appeal and must now be confined to the wrongs alleged in the original statements of claim.

50. There is of course some substance in the contention that from 2002 onwards, there is the appearance that the appellants were seeking, merely, to keep the proceedings “ticking over”. They did not at any point bring a motion for judgment. They did not bring a motion for particulars. Their conduct with regard to seeking to amend the statement of claim and to present a fait accompli regarding consolidation by the consolidated statement of claim was not in accordance with the Rules of the Superior Courts. But it cannot be said there were no ongoing steps in the proceedings. One of those steps, on the 6th February, 2002, was the lodging of €253,947.62 in favour of both the Bank and Deloitte. In my view, this is a significant consideration in assessing the appellants’ bona fides at least insofar as concerning prosecuting the claims. This fact although mentioned in the High Court judgement, was not weighed in the context of a consideration of whether the delay was inexcusable. In my view, there was a failure here to address a relevant consideration.

The respondents’ submissions
51. It is claimed that from a period commencing from the Supreme Court’s upholding of Builders appeal in February 1998, there was culpable delay on the part of both plaintiffs from that date until they eventually brought a motion to amend the statement of claim in December 2004, a period of over six years. However, the stay in proceedings, granted by Keane J. back in March 1992, ran until the security for costs had been given in the cases where that was required, and not merely until the hearing of the Builders appeal. The proceedings were thus in fact stayed until a security was given on the 6th February 2002. In my view, the period of alleged delay must, therefore, run from that date, not the Bank’s preferred date, some four years earlier.

The delay and default in filing defences
52. The Bank did not deliver its defence in the Builders’ action until June 2002, more than four years after the final judgment of the Supreme Court on the issue of security for costs. They also point out, very fairly, that the other defendant, Deloitte, has not even yet delivered a defence. I think this is a factor which tells significantly against both respondents, the more so against Deloitte. The onus to progress proceedings does not only lie on one side. I consider that these are countervailing factors which, albeit not, strictly speaking, acquiescence, cannot be ignored.

The High Court judgment
53. I would further summarise matters this way. The High Court judge’s view was that there had been a number of separate and inexcusable delays on the part of Homes or Builders in prosecuting the claim. He observed that no adequate explanation had been offered which justified the appellants’ dilatoriness which had been the predominant cause of their failure to prosecute the claim. Here and at other points, there was an error as to where lay the onus of proof. The judge pointed to the twelve month period between the issue of the plenary summons and the delivery of the statement of claim. He was critical of the fact that during the six year period between March 1992 and February 1998, no evidence was adduced of the fact that Homes was concerned by the delay. He characterised “procedural matters” as times when Homes’ appeal was pending before the Supreme Court; Keane J.’s order, staying the proceedings, was in effect and the respondents were pursuing security for costs and cross-appealing the order fixing the sums of security. I do not believe that Homes can be fairly criticised for this delay.

54. The High Court judgment held that there was nothing to prevent Homes from prosecuting its claim as and from the Supreme Court appeal on the 11th February, 1998. As pointed out earlier, in a letter dated the 7th July, 1999, Deloitte’s solicitors actually accepted the onus was on them to bring the application to fix the security. have already made observations on the characterisation of the period from the 25th October 2001 to the 23rd October 2004.

55. On a number of occasions, the judgment refers to “procedural steps” taken by the respondents contributing to the delay. I do not think it is possible to make a value-laiden distinction in principle between the “procedural steps”, in the sense of seeking security and processing appeals, adopted by one side as opposed to steps taken by the appellants.

Time began to run on the 6th February, 2002
56. I am satisfied for computation purposes that the time should run from the 6th February, 2002, the date when security was actually given. Even from that point, the issue of the appeal against the High Court Order compelling the plaintiffs to reply to particulars was decided only on the 16th January, 2004, and this motion was issued on the 25th February, 2005, little more than one year later.

57. Some of the delays which have occurred in these cases have to be seen as being highly unusual, including lengthy and unfortunate delays in the court system itself during the periods up to the issuing of the notices of motion to dismiss.

58. It is true that the efforts to re-plead the case were inappropriate. The actual pleading of the case in the intended amended pleadings was entirely unsatisfactory. However, this is not an application to strike out the claim for abuse of the court process.

The remedy
59. I am not convinced that this is a case where the claim should be struck out. That is too draconian a remedy. The view of this Court as to certain aspects of the appellants’ conduct to date can be expressed in costs. Clearly, it will not be open to the appellants to again canvas any addition to the claims as to the wrongs alleged, and matters should now proceed in accordance with the order below and on the basis of the claims as originally contended, although they may be particularised. The remedies contained in the order made should reflect the extent to which the parties bear a responsibility for the events which have occurred. The statements of claim must be reduced in length, make sense, and comply with the requirements of the Rules of the Superior Courts.

The order
60. I would allow the appeal, therefore, and, in substitution for the order of that High Court, direct that the appellants claims will stand dismissed, but that there will be a stay on the order, subject however to the following conditions:

        (a) that the appellants will serve statements of claim in compliance with the Rules of the Superior Courts (not more than 15 pages in each case) within three weeks of the date hereof;

        (b) that the defendants will file their defences within three weeks of the receipt of the statements of claim;

        (c) that all parties will provide particulars of their claims or defences and will complete discovery, on the basis of the claims and defences within a period of three months from the date of filing of the defendants’ respective defences. In default of compliance with conditions (a) and (b), an application may be made on two days notice to the High Court in default of pleading or discovery for further orders including orders as to costs and for orders removing the stay aforesaid; and further

        (d) that an early application be made to the President of the High Court or a judge nominated by him to monitor and supervise compliance with these orders; for case management; and to fix dates for hearing of the linked cases subject to any further orders as appropriate as to compliance) with the rules of the Commercial Court (whether or not by entry into that Court’s list or not) regarding the provision of statements of the facts of the case, written submissions as to the law, witness statements, the provision of an issue paper, and such other ancillary procedural steps as are necessary to expedite and finalise these long outstanding claims.


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2013/S6.html