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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> McDonald-Grant v Sutherland & Company [2007] ScotCS CSIH_54 (21 June 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_54.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSIH_54, [2007] CSIH 54

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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Osborne

Lord Johnston

Sir David Edward, Q.C.

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] CSIH 54

A1304/03

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD OSBORNE

 

in

 

RECLAIMING MOTION

 

in the cause

 

MARILYN LOUISE McDONALD-GRANT

Pursuer and Respondent;

 

against

 

(FIRST) SUTHERLAND & COMPANY and OTHERS

Defenders and Reclaimers:

 

_______

 

 

Act: Mr. Brodie; Lindsays W.S. (for Quantum Compensation Specialists, Aberdeen)(Pursuer and Respondent)

Alt: Mr. Spencer Kennedy, Solicitor Advocate; Balfour & Manson (Defenders and Reclaimers)

 

30 May 2007

 

The background circumstances

[1] In this action, the pursuer and respondent in this reclaiming motion seeks damages from the defenders and reclaimers. The pursuer is the widow of the late William Barclay Grant, who died on 16 July 1998. The defenders are a firm of solicitors, now dissolved, and the whole surviving partners thereof, who acted on the instructions of William Barclay Grant. The basis of the claim for damages is the alleged professional negligence of the defenders.

[2] The defenders having stated several preliminary pleas, the action was appointed to the Procedure Roll on their motion. In due course, on 1 June 2005, the action came before the Lord Ordinary, when the submissions of the parties were heard. The Lord Ordinary made avizandum. On 7 November 2006, the Lord Ordinary, having resumed consideration of the matter (1) allowed to parties a proof before answer of their respective averments on record, all pleas standing; (2) appointed the proof to proceed on a date to be fixed; and (3) reserved the question of expenses. Thereafter the defenders and reclaimers enrolled a reclaiming motion against the interlocutor of 7 November 2006. That interlocutor being one mentioned in Rule of Court 38.3(4), the defenders were bound to seek early disposal of the reclaiming motion, in consequence of the provisions of Rule of Court 38.7A, which they did. At the hearing of that motion, the court was provided with an assessment of the likely duration of the hearing to determine the reclaiming motion, which, in this case, was one day. Against that background, on 21 November 2006, the case was sent to the Summar Roll, with a diet of one day; early disposal was ordered.

[3] On 22 March 2007, the one-day diet for the hearing of the reclaiming motion took place. Argument was heard in part. During the course of that hearing, it came to be appreciated by counsel for the parties and members of the court that the diet allotted would prove insufficient. Accordingly, on that date, the diet was discharged and the case was, of new, appointed to the Summar Roll for a hearing of three days duration. The case continued to be regarded as suitable for early disposal.

[4] On 22 May 2007 the Keeper of the Rolls intimated to the parties a three day diet for the hearing of the reclaiming motion, that diet being 30 May 2007 and the two following days.

[5] When the case called before us today, 30 May 2007, our attention was drawn to a motion enrolled on behalf of the defenders and reclaimers on 28 May 2007 in the following terms:

" ... to dispense with the period of intimation of this Single Bill, to discharge the diet set down for Wednesday 30 May, to refuse the reclaiming motion and to allow the pursuer a proof before answer with eight days being required, to find the expenses of the reclaiming motion to be expenses in the cause and to reserve the expenses of the Procedure Roll Debate before Lord Dawson."

At the same time as the enrolment of this motion, those acting for the defenders and reclaimers intimated to the clerk of court that the reclaiming motion would not proceed.

 

The circumstances of the discharge of the diet

[6] When the case came before us today, we expressed our extreme dissatisfaction with the situation which had developed. The court had been put in a position in which it was, of consent, being asked to discharge a three day diet so late that the time of the court could not usefully be used. In consequence, a waste of court time and thus of scarce public resources was inevitable. In this situation, the court required an explanation from the defenders' advisers as to why this situation had come about.

[7] Mr. Kennedy, on behalf of the defenders, said that the waste of the court's time was regretted. He had himself conducted the Procedure Roll debate on behalf of the defenders before the Lord Ordinary, which had lasted for only a part of one day. On that basis, when a reclaiming motion had been enrolled on behalf of the defenders, he had considered that one day would have been sufficient for that purpose, although that had proved not to be so. During the course of discussion of the reclaiming motion on 22 March 2007, in the light of certain observations made by members of the court, he had come to think that the prospects of having the case dismissed were not as good as he had previously thought. In consequence, following the discharge of that diet, Mr. Kennedy had discussed the position of the defenders with senior counsel, who then acted on their behalf. The view formed was that the defenders nevertheless had good prospects of success in the reclaiming motion, which was considered likely to succeed, a view which we readily understand. Following these discussions a report was sent to the defenders' insurers. The sequel to that was that Mr. Kennedy was given instructions to accept that there should be a proof before answer in the case, but only upon the basis that the expenses of the reclaiming motion were to be expenses in the cause. On receiving these instructions, Mr. Kennedy wrote to those representing the pursuer on 11 May 2007 setting out the defenders' position. At that stage, of course, neither party had knowledge of the date of the present diet which, as already narrated, was intimated on 22 May 2007. However, it was only on 28 May 2007 that agreement was reached, when the present motion was enrolled and intimation given to the court that the reclaiming motion would not proceed. In the course of the discussion before us, it was accepted that at no time following upon receipt by Mr. Kennedy of his instructions from the defenders' insurers had any indication been given to the Keeper of the Rolls that the reclaiming motion might not proceed. When that point was put to Mr. Kennedy by the court, he responded by saying that he had, perhaps, expected that a three day diet would not be available in early course; also, it was by no means a foregone conclusion that the pursuer would accept the condition insisted upon by the defenders as regards the expenses of the reclaiming motion.

[8] In view of the fact that parties were at one as to the future procedure in this case, we granted the defenders' motion to discharge the present diet, to refuse the reclaiming motion and to affirm the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary. We also found that the expenses of the reclaiming motion should be expenses in the cause and that the expenses of the Procedure Roll debate should be reserved.

 

Some observations of the court

[9] We feel compelled to express our dismay at the waste of scarce public resources which has occurred in this case. The diet of 22 March 2007 was lost because of an erroneous judgment as to the likely duration of the discussion of the reclaiming motion, a judgment which we find surprising in view of the obvious legal complexities of this case. However, that pales into insignificance in comparison with what subsequently occurred. In our view, those who are professionally involved in litigation in this court have an indisputable obligation to take reasonable care to avoid situations where court time will be wasted. Pursuant to that obligation, we consider that, in the present case, as soon as it had become clear to the defenders' advisers that there was doubt as to whether the reclaiming motion would proceed, that state of affairs should have been communicated to the Keeper of the Rolls. Only by keeping the Keeper of the Rolls informed about developing circumstances, which may result in a diet not being required, can situations such as the present one be avoided.

[10] It ought to be clearly understood that, when early disposal of a reclaiming motion is ordered, the Keeper of the Rolls may intimate a diet at very short notice. If he is not warned about circumstances which may render it doubtful whether the reclaiming motion is to proceed or not, it may be that he will allocate an early diet and then receive information that the reclaiming motion is not to proceed only so late that other business cannot be allocated to that diet, as has happened here. On the other hand, if an early warning is given of circumstances which may result in the reclaiming motion not proceeding, the Keeper of the Rolls can defer allocation of an early diet until it is clear that such a diet is in fact required. It should be remembered that, where dates for an early diet are allocated to one set of litigants, but not used by them, other litigants, are deprived of the opportunity to be heard on those dates. Only by acceptance of the obligation to keep the Keeper of the Rolls informed of relevant developments can the system of early disposal be operated effectively, without waste and in a way that is fair to litigants in general.

 


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