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Jersey Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Holmes -v- Lingard and Others [2016] JRC 167 (23 September 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2016/2016_167.html Cite as: [2016] JRC 167 |
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Injunction - appeal against the Master's decision dated 11 November, 2015
Before : |
T. J. Le Cocq, Esq., Deputy Bailiff, and Jurats Nicolle and Ramsden |
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Between |
Shane Michael Holmes |
Appellant |
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And |
Harry James Lingard |
First Respondent |
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HJL Holdings Limited |
Second Respondent |
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Angel Fish Limited |
Third Respondent |
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Mr S. M. Holmes appeared on his own behalf.
Advocate S. J. Young for the Respondents.
judgment
the deputy bailiff:
1. This is an appeal from Shane Michael Holmes, the appellant, against a judgment of the Master of 11th November, 2015, in which the Master struck out the appellant's claim against Harry James Lingard, HJL Holdings Limited and Angel Fish Limited (collectively the respondents).
2. This matter has taken a slightly unusual procedural course in that the appellant, at the end of the hearing of this appeal, sought and was granted leave by this Court to call a witness (whose affidavit had been deployed by the respondents) for the purpose of cross-examination. Accordingly we adjourned the application to allow the cross-examination of the witness in question, Mr Andrew Robertson ("Mr Robertson") within a narrow ambit relating to the affidavit that he had sworn. Mr Robertson gave evidence before us and was cross-examined and thereafter, due to time constraints, we invited both the appellant and the respondents to file their closing submissions by way of written argument which they have done. Following receipt of the supplementary contentions from the parties Mr Holmes sought to file further documentation in reply to the contentions made by the respondents. He did not seek leave nor did filing such material accord with the directions given by the Court and accordingly the Court did not read it.
3. We take the relevant background to this matter from an earlier judgment of the Master in this case, (Holmes-v-Lingard, HJL Holdings and Angel Fish Ltd [2015] JRC 172) in which, at paragraph 2 of that judgment, the Master explains:-
4. It would unnecessarily burden this judgment to refer to the full background that gave rise to the Master's Judgment under appeal. In essence the matter before the Master, and hence this appeal, is whether or not a binding agreement had been reached by the parties to compromise the proceedings and what if any effect should be given to a document signed by Mr Holmes and Mr Lingard, dated 7th July, 2015, ("the July 2015 agreement") which purports to be a settlement of these proceedings.
5. Essentially the July 2015 agreement has the following relevant elements:-
(i) It is described as a "global settlement agreement".
(ii) The plaintiff parties are identified as Mr Holmes, Home Farm Developments Limited and Strata Developments Limited;
(iii) The defendant parties are described as Mr Lingard, HJL Holdings Limited and Angel Fish Limited;
(iv) It is described as being in respect of actions which comprise the following:-
(a) all matters currently pleaded in Court File 2014/095 including claims referred to in the affidavits filed in that action; and
(b) all and any additional matters arising between [the parties] in connection with the building projects at La Tour Hotel ... the Home Farm site.... and any other contractual or other agreement or arrangement which has happened in respect of any other building project or proposal in Jersey...".
(v) The fundamental terms were:-
(a) The matter currently before the Royal Court numbered 2014/095 would be withdrawn and discontinued forthwith and a letter would be signed by all parties to that action and sent to the Court to that effect;
(b) [the parties] would each bear their own costs;
(c) Existing costs orders in respect of 2014/095 would not be enforced save for the provisions set out at (v) below;
(d) The actions were settled on a full and final basis by the terms of the agreement;
(e) The balance of funds held by Bedell Cristin subject to the terms of the consent agreement dated 25th June, 2015, in the matter 2013/046 and 2013/0341 would be applied against the legal costs incurred by the defendant parties;
(vi) The terms of the settlement agreement would be confidential but the parties might relay the fact that the settlement has been achieved to relevant third parties.
(vii) It was signed by Mr Holmes for all of the plaintiff parties and Mr Lingard for all of the defendant parties.
6. The draft of the July 2015 agreement had been prepared by the legal adviser to the respondents. As part of the discussion as to its terms Mr Holmes had sought an additional clause seeking the setting aside of previous judgments issued by the Royal Court in connection with the dispute between him and the respondents. On the morning of 7th July, 2015, Mr Holmes sent an email to the respondents' legal advisers, again further articulating his wish that, while the judgments were presently a matter for public record, he wished to have them set aside "effectively wiping the slate clean". He confirmed "we are indeed writing to the Royal Court to withdraw and discontinue proceedings but we will not be disclosing the terms of the settlement... the terms may stay confidential between the parties."
7. The respondents' legal adviser replied indicating that there was no ability to remove judgments of the Royal Court and that they remain as a matter of public record. In an email in response Mr Holmes pursued this point and again the respondents' legal adviser maintained the position that it was not possible to set aside judgments and indicated that if terms could not be agreed by close of business that day then his clients would proceed with the case.
8. Mr Holmes' response to that was sent just before 1pm and he said "the setting aside of matter and matters subsequent so there is little point in delaying conclusion of the settlement at this point." He went on to invite the Respondents' legal adviser to "engross the settlement ready for signing." By email sent shortly before 4pm on the 7th July Mr Holmes stated "I have delivered the signed agreement, could you please provide me with a copy of the signed agreement. After that the parties may deal with the letter to the Court."
9. On the same date the respondents' legal advisers produced a consent letter for the discontinuance of the proceedings and the Court was notified orally of that settlement. On 8th July Mr Holmes sent a text to Mr Robertson where he stated "... can you please confirm that Harry has signed and sent back because I need to collect final copies so we can arrange a letter to Court to confirm settlement has been reached, thanks."
10. The matter then became rather more complicated. It is not disputed that on 11th July Mr Holmes, Mr Lingard and Mr Robertson met. The purpose of that meeting, however, was disputed. It is Mr Holmes' contention that prior to signing the July 2015 agreement he had agreed through Mr Robertson that Mr Holmes would receive a deal worth £100,000 from Mr Lingard. The purpose of the meeting on 11th July was to sort out that deal. According to Mr Lingard, however, the purpose of the meeting was for Mr Holmes to apologise to Mr Lingard in connection with the litigation and to explain that he had a number of documents which might be of interest to Mr Lingard in a collateral claim that Mr Lingard was proposing to make against a third party.
11. Mr Lingard's account of that meeting was set out in his affidavit that was before the Master as was Mr Robertson's account set out in his affidavit. We do not need to set out the detail of those accounts save to record that there is a significant measure of disagreement as to what was understood between Mr Holmes and Mr Lingard.
12. The July 2015 agreement was provided by Mr Lingard to the Court on 5th and subsequently 20th August, 2015. Prior to that, having been informed of the existence of the compromise by the Respondents' legal advisers, the Master, in issuing a judgment in draft for comment made an observation to the parties in an email of 3rd August, 2015, expressing, subject to seeing a signed consent order, his delight that the matters had been resolved and asking whether or not the judgment should be published, which he was minded to do, if the effect of publication would be to compromise any settlement that had been reached.
13. Mr Holmes replied to him by email of 4th August, 2015, saying that in his view publication would compromise "the desired effect of the settlement. The parties desire to wipe the slate clean as far as reasonably practical and consent to set existing judgments aside rather than have further judgments published. I am dealing with the consent order today and would hope to conclude it this week."
14. The Master had a hearing on 13th August, 2015, to hand down his judgment. The respondent's legal advisers appeared and indicated that there was a settlement which had been reached which was not conditional on whether or not the judgment was published. Mr Holmes, who also appeared, took the view that settlement was conditional on the parties' agreement that publication should not take place. However he raised no other issue than that at that time. The Master adjourned the hearing.
15. There then occurred an event which is in our view important to this appeal. On 18th August Mr Holmes met with Mr Robertson. Precisely what happened during the course of that meeting is contentious. Mr Holmes, unbeknown to Mr Robertson, recorded that meeting and produced for the Master and indeed before us what he stated was a transcript of that meeting. Mr Lingard and Mr Robertson dispute the completeness of that transcript and Mr Robertson disputes the conclusions that Mr Holmes sought to draw from the things said during that meeting.
16. Matters returned before the Master on 20th August, 2015. He sets out what happened in his judgment at paragraph 72 et seq:-
17. That adjudication was to the effect that a settlement had been reached between the parties and for the reasons set out in the Master's Judgment the proceedings should be struck out.
18. There is no difference between the parties as to the appropriate test for striking out proceedings. An application to strike out may be granted by the Royal Court pursuant to Rule 6/13 of the Royal Court Rules 2004 as amended. Rule 6/13 provides:-
19. It is clear that the Master took the view that in the event it could be concluded that a binding settlement had been reached between the parties but to allow such proceedings to continue would be both vexatious and an abuse of the process of the Court because the Court would be asked to adjudicate on a matter that had been resolved by agreement. We agree that it is completely clear that such an agreement has been reached then it would be appropriate to strike out the claim. If, however, that question turned on disputed fact then in our view the more appropriate course was for the agreement to be pleaded and perhaps dealt with as a preliminary issue.
20. The Court of Appeal has had occasion to consider the test for striking out in the recent judgment of Home Farm Developments Limited v Le Sueur [2015] JCA 242 in which the Court, at paragraph 25, said this:-
21. The Court then went on to say at paragraph 28:-
22. The classic statement of the test, for an appeal from a decision of the Master, a Greffier substitute, is that set out in the case of Murphy v Collins [2000] JLR 276, namely that the Court should exercise its own discretion and give such weight as it thought fit to the Greffier's exercise of discretion.
23. It was put to us that the law that governs the function of this Court on an appeal from the Master was set out in the case of Downes v Marshall [2010] JLR 265. Although in its terms, that judgment expressed itself as applying only to appeals from the Family Registrar and not "with appeals from the Master of the Royal Court ... where different considerations may apply" it was argued before us that Birt, Bailiff in Incat Equatorial Guinea Limited and others v Luba Freeport Limited [2010] JLR 435 had favoured the test in Downes over the earlier test set out in Murphy.
24. The test in Downes is in the following terms:-
25. In Incat the Court was considering an appeal against the decision of the Greffier on taxation. At paragraph 19 of its judgment the Court said:-
26. It is not clear to us that the principles applicable in Downes and Incat, where there is no delegation of the Court's powers but rather the Registrar or Greffier respectively are exercising an independent jurisdiction, apply in cases where, as here, the Master is exercising a delegated jurisdiction. We apply the test in Murphy. The Master has very substantial procedural expertise and experience and that a high measure of regard should be paid to his judgment and exercise of discretion in such procedural matters.
27. This was, of course, not what might be called a "standard" strike out application.
28. The norm for an application to strike out is where one party asserts against another that the claim or defence of that other party should be struck out either pursuant to Rule 6/13 of the Royal Court Rules or under the Court's inherent jurisdiction. This case is somewhat different. The Master's judgment does not touch at all upon the substance of the claim between the appellants and the respondents. It says nothing as to whether those claims are good or bad or could of themselves be struck out. The judgment is instead directed to whether or not an agreement had been reached to compromise those claims.
29. In such a case the Court is dealing with a collateral issue and not the substantive case. The effect of striking out on such an issue means that the substantive case would never be heard and would not have been considered against the threshold requirements of an application to strike out. It may, of course, in obvious cases be entirely appropriate to strike out a case on that basis but this seems to us to be a factor that calls for, if anything, a heightened level of caution.
30. The judgment of the Master was both comprehensive and thorough but in essence the question before him was a relatively straightforward one. Was there an agreement between the appellant and respondents for the compromise of the proceedings which was so clear that it could not be meaningfully challenged? Indeed the Master at paragraph 110 of his judgment says this:-
31. It is of course this "one inevitable conclusion" that the appellants challenge. In paragraph 95 of his judgment, the Master, having analysed a significant amount of the material before him, expresses himself in the following terms:-
And, at paragraph 97:-
32. That finding being made, it seems clear that the Master must also have found that whatever transpired between the July 2015 agreement and the 5th August changed the position to mean that the agreement reflected in the July 2015 agreement was then effective and unassailable. This was, of course, a determination that the Master had to make on agreed documents and agreed facts. To the extent that it turned on a genuine factual dispute, then it could only be resolved by evidence before the Court.
33. As did the Master, it is important to set out the events of the 5th August, 2015, in which a number of relevant communications took place:-
(i) At 09:03hrs Mr Holmes texted Mr Robertson saying:-
"If Harry wants I can meet him and his lawyer today to discuss the consent order for court and Hartigans".
(ii) At 10:44hrs Mr Robertson replied forwarding a message from Mr Lingard saying:-
"No, want all my papers first. Tell him if he does not hand over papers he will no longer mediate."
(iii) Mr Holmes then responded by texting:
"No consent order then."
(iv) At 15:22hrs Mr Robertson, having first unsuccessfully tried to telephone Mr Holmes, then sent a text in the following terms:-
"Hi, met with Harry can you call when free."
(v) Mr Holmes then called Mr Robertson at 15:29hrs who was at that time with Mr Lingard. Mr Holmes spoke to Mr Lingard. He characterises that conversation to the effect that he re-iterated that the confidential agreement was confidential between the parties and that when he started to re-iterate his position on the consent order and Hartigans Mr Lingard said that he had to let his dog out and handed the phone back to Mr Robertson.
(vi) At 15:48hrs Mr Holmes was copied into an email between Mr Lingard and his legal adviser which stated:-
"Shane Holmes is refusing to sign and return the letter, he wants the attached to be signed and returned instead setting aside the number of existing judgments. In principle I have no objection to this provided that it does not impact on existing costs orders that have allowed me to claim the money that was held in escrow by Hanson Renouf or otherwise affect me in any way."
(vii) By this time Mr Holmes had prepared a consent order and signed it. We do not need to set out the draft consent order in full. We merely observe that it was not in the same terms as the July 2015 agreement in that it required the setting aside of a number of previous judgments of the Court.
(viii) At 16:36hrs Mr Holmes emailed a copy of what he had just then sent to the Master and at 17:02hrs Mr Lingard emailed Mr Holmes saying:-
"Let's see what he says, can you find me the emails or letter I need for my solicitor who is here today to deal with Hartigans I need to know what was said about getting permission from houses about."
(ix) At 17:06hrs the Master indicated to Mr Holmes that whilst it was possible to withdraw the present proceedings he could not make an order to undo what had already been decided by the Royal Court.
(x) At 19:53hrs Mr Holmes replied to Mr Lingard's email saying:-
"Agreed, but you will understand that I conflicted from engaging in any other the matter until the Court has officially withdrawn and discontinued case 2014/095. Hopefully that will happen this week and then I will contact you."
(xi) Mr Lingard replied at 2029hrs:-
"You keep the file, I will pay Hartigans for photocopies."
34. It is clear and is indeed set out in the judgment of the Master that it was Mr Holmes' position that as at 5th August he was still awaiting details of the deal or "sweetener" that he was expecting to receive from Mr Lingard which, so Mr Holmes would argue, was an important although unwritten part of the agreement between himself and Mr Lingard for the compromise of the proceedings. Mr Holmes' contention was that it was only on 18th August, 2015, that he appreciated what was being offered, namely a share of the proceeds of litigation, and he was not interested in that offer.
35. The Master deals with the extent to which things changed between his determining of the position on 7th July, 2015, and the end of 5th August, 2015. He notes, at paragraph 100 of his judgment that Mr Holmes had produced the consent order to discontinue proceedings that he wished Mr Lingard to sign and that that draft had been signed by Mr Holmes. At paragraph 101 of his judgment the Master reflects the fact that Mr Holmes as at 5th August was still contending that the publication of the Master's judgment on security for costs would compromise the settlement and he stated that he was dealing with a consent order that day and hoped to conclude it that week. The Master also says:-
36. The Master then went on in his judgment of paragraph 102 to reflect the fact that Mr Holmes argued that he could not give such a qualification because he would be referring to without prejudice correspondence and discussions. The Master rejected that argument indicating that it was perfectly proper for parties to say what other steps needed to be taken or agreed before the Court can discontinue proceedings without revealing what those steps are. He also reflects his view that Mr Holmes' position was inconsistent with the email from Mr Lingard to his advocate sent on 5th August which of course made no reference to matters other than Mr Holmes' desire to see various judgments of the Court set aside. The Master points out at paragraph 104 that Mr Holmes' confirmation sent to Mr Lingard's legal adviser that the consent order had been sent to the Court is also inconsistent with his suggestion that everything was still conditional upon further agreement being reached with Mr Lingard. The Master says, correctly, that Mr Holmes had said no such thing either to the Court or to Mr Lingard's lawyer in communications that were before him. At paragraph 107 of his judgment the Master says this:-
37. There is nothing unreasonable in the Master's interpretation of the messages and documentation before him. It may very well be that that interpretation is entirely the correct one. However, it is Mr Holmes' position, on oath, that there was an understanding that a certain deal would be made and that he did not agree to withdraw the proceedings without it. Indeed it may be argued that in providing his own consent order, which he signed, which contained terms which were not reflected in the July 2015 agreement was itself an indication that Mr Holmes did not consider the July 2015 agreement as reflecting all of what had been agreed. It may be, however bizarrely, that Mr Holmes did believe he was not able to make reference to further conditions that applied to his agreement to discontinue the proceedings. Ultimately that is a matter that could only be determined by the court making a finding on the evidence.
38. Mr Holmes and Mr Lingard had signed a consent order of 4th August, 2015, withdrawing the proceedings. That consent order did not reflect the July 2015 agreement as it contained a provision for the cancellation of earlier judgments.
39. The 4th August consent order was, so Mr Holmes asserts, superseded by his draft consent order of 5th August.
40. As we have explained above we heard from Mr Robertson on oath. We gave leave to call and cross-examine Mr Robertson on the matter of the transcript tendered by the appellant, limited to the accuracy of the transcript, how the discussion between Mr Robertson and Mr Holmes took place, and what was meant by Mr Robertson's comments or sounds that he made during that discussion that appear in the transcript. Mr Robertson disputed before us that the transcript was fully accurate and painted a picture that Mr Holmes orchestrated his interview to procure from Mr Robertson answers or comments that supported Mr Holmes' contention that there had been a collateral agreement or understanding between himself and Mr Lingard for a benefit to Mr Holmes as part of reaching the July 2015 agreement.
41. We make no comment or observations about either Mr Robertson's answers or demeanour but in our view it was appropriate to allow the appellant the opportunity to cross-examine Mr Robertson not only on the conversation between the appellant and Mr Robertson in August 2015 and what broadly might or might not have been agreed between Mr Holmes and Mr Lingard.
42. In effect Mr Holmes is arguing that the July 2015 agreement does not reflect the entirety of the agreement between the parties. This was an issue which turned upon, potentially, the contested evidence of Mr Holmes personally, Mr Lingard and Mr Robertson as well as upon the contemporaneous documentation. The documentation may well have supported the Master's interpretation, and in our view it did, but the Master did not have the benefit of full evidence and indeed could not in the exercise of a jurisdiction to strike out have determined issues of fact that were in dispute and could only be resolved by oral evidence.
43. We note that in Home Farm Developments Limited v Le Sueur (cited above) the Court at paragraph 49 said this:-
44. We are not blind to the fact that in that case Mr Holmes was advancing a very similar argument to the argument that he advances in this case.
45. In Home Farm Developments Limited the Court, at paragraph 29, also said this:-
And, at paragraph 37(a) reviewing an email:-
And at paragraph 50:-
46. It is clearly the case that much of the analysis carried out by the Master in his judgment is analysis of correspondence in the form of emails or texts that could only be characterised as informal and the authors of which, for the most part, were not lawyers. Mr Holmes argues for one interpretation which may or may not be an interpretation favoured by a trial court. What it does seem to us to indicate clearly, however, that, as the Court of Appeal said in Home Farm these are matters that "can only be properly explored at trial."
47. The Master could not of course have had this evidence before him and because he was not in a position to make any determination as to disputed fact or find for one party or another on the basis of oral evidence. That is quintessentially a function of the Royal Court sitting with the benefit of Jurats.
48. We have every sympathy with the position of the Master who after a most careful and thorough analysis of the documentation reached the position that there was a concluded and unimpeachable agreement to withdraw the proceedings which should lead him to strike out those proceedings.
49. That notwithstanding, having heard the evidence of Mr Roberson and reviewed again the contentions of Mr Holmes, we cannot say at this point that it was so clear that an agreement, certain in all its fundamental terms, had been reached by the appellants and the respondents for the compromise of the proceedings, that the proceedings should be struck out.
50. With some reluctance, because we do not in any sense fault the Master's analysis of the documentation before him, conclude that this was not such a case in which an order to strike out a claim, on the basis of a collateral compromise agreement which was in dispute, should have been made.
51. In the circumstances we allow the appeal and order that costs should be left over for determination by the trial court.