(In this YAWS version a few editorial alterations have been made to the description of the CPR and Practice Directions, eg references to Part 3.8 have been changed to Rule 3.8, to ensure consistency with the remainder of the site.)
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
HIS HONOUR JUDGE RICHARD SEYMOUR QC
SITTING AS A HIGH COURT JUDGE
HQ06 X02307
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2 A 2LL
24th May 2007
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE AULD
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
FRAMLINGTON GROUP LIMITED
AXA FRAMLINGTON GROUP LIMITED
Appellants
- and -
IAN BARNETSON
Respondent
| Lord Justice Auld : | |||||||||||||
| Introduction | |||||||||||||
| 1. | This is an appeal from a decision of HHJ Seymour QC, sitting as a Judge of the High Court, on Friday 19th January 2007, in which he declined to require the respondent/claimant, Mr Ian Barnetson, to re-serve his first witness statement, omitting from it certain passages that the appellants/defendants, ("Framlington") contended referred to matters that were "without prejudice". | ||||||||||||
| 2. | The issue for the Court is whether and in what circumstances there may be a dispute prior to litigation or the threat of it, to which the "without prejudice" rule may apply to settlement negotiations between the parties. | ||||||||||||
| The claim and the relevant facts | |||||||||||||
| 3. | In the action, which Mr Barnetson began on 24th April 2006, he claims damages against Framlington for wrongful dismissal from its employment on 31st December 2005 as its Chief Operating Officer and for other alleged breaches of his contract of employment. Under the contract, which was in writing, the employment was for a term to 1st April 2007. The contract permitted Framlington to terminate it earlier on making certain payments in lieu of notice, which Framlington, by letter of 20th December 2005, purported to do with effect from 31st December 2005. However, its Chief Executive Officer, Mr Robert Kyprianou, had told him, on 28th October 2005, of what it intended. | ||||||||||||
| The facts and the matters in Mr Barnetson's witness statement that Framlington seeks to exclude | |||||||||||||
| 4. | To indicate the significance of the matters giving rise to the dispute that were to harden into threatened litigation and then litigation, I start with Framlington's engagement of Mr Barnetson in early March 2005 as its Chief Operating Officer and a number of exchanges at that time and over the ensuing months between him and Lord Douro, Framlington's Chairman, and others acting for it. These were detailed in Mr Barnetson's first witness statement in evidence before the Judge and accepted by him for the purpose of determining the issue before him. In summary, and so far as is relevant, his account was as follows. | ||||||||||||
| 5. | On 7th March 2005, Lord Douro orally offered Mr Barnetson the post of Chief Operating Officer at an annual salary of £172,500 with standard provision at his executive level for a car allowance, pension, holiday, health-care etc. Mr Barnetson also understood from the discussion that he would be entitled to two further significant benefits, namely allotment to him of restricted shares in Framlington ("the Restricted Shares") and participation in its bonus scheme comprising guaranteed and discretionary sums. He accepted the offer and promptly took up the post, the orally agreed terms being left for later written confirmation. | ||||||||||||
| 6. | However, in the course of protracted efforts by Mr Barnetson to secure such confirmation, the matter of the Restricted Shares and the content of the bonus benefits rapidly become bones of contention between him and Framlington, Lord Douro in particular. According to Mr Barnetson, at least two approaches to Lord Douro in March 2005 failed to secure the sought written confirmation. | ||||||||||||
| 7. | Eventually, on or about 11th April 2005, he was presented with two draft contracts, which he regarded as incomplete or inaccurate in a number of respects, in particular, as to allotment of the Restricted Shares and bonus. He raised his concerns about the drafts in a meeting with Lord Douro two days later, who indicated that he would have a further draft contract prepared. There were further meetings, at one of which, on 20th April 2005, Mr Barnetson reminded Lord Douro that he had still not received the sought confirmation of his terms of employment, again mentioning the Restricted Shares; Lord Douro again indicated that he would attend to the matter. | ||||||||||||
| 8. | On 25th April 2005, Lord Douro handed Mr Barnetson a further document purporting to confirm the terms of his contract, and asked him to sign it. Mr Barnetson refused to do so, querying a number of matters in it, in particular, the absence of any mention of what he understood to be his entitlement to the Restricted Shares. Lord Douro's response was one of impatience; he threatened to withdraw Framlington's offer of appointment; he remarked that they would have a very difficult working relationship; and he said that the corporate shareholders would be unhappy with Mr Barnetson, since they needed formal confirmation of his role. As a result of that pressure, Mr Barnetson signed the document. He did so in the belief that Lord Douro would honour the terms he understood they had orally agreed on 7th March 2005, making plain that he regarded the document as incomplete. | ||||||||||||
| 9. | Further attempts by Mr Barnetson at the end of April 2005 to sort out the matter, this time with Lord Douro and Mr Alain Dromer, a board member of Framlington, were rebuffed. Over the ensuing months he was deterred from raising it again with Lord Douro because of the latter's generally overbearing attitude and because he believed that he would honour his word. However, in early August 2005, he mentioned it to the Chief Operating Officer of AXA Investment Managers, the second appellant, which was negotiating the purchase of Framlington. | ||||||||||||
| 10. | Eventually, on 26th October 2005, Mr Barnetson wrote to Lord Douro and Mr Dromer seeking resolution of the matter. This gave rise to a telephone conversation on 27th October 2005, in which Mr Barnetson expressed to Lord Douro in blunt terms his dissatisfaction. Lord Douro's response was to terminate the conversation. | ||||||||||||
| 11. | On the following day Mr Kyprianou told Mr Barnetson that he would be dismissed at the end of the year, and sought to discuss terms for his departure. Mr Barnetson responded on 1st November by presenting Mr Kyprianou with a sheet headed "Ian Barnetson-COO Framlington Settlement", outlining his acceptable settlement terms for early termination of his contract, including what he sought by way of the Restricted Shares and bonus for 2005 and 2006. | ||||||||||||
| 12. | There followed in due course the first of the following exchanges that Framlington seek to exclude as "without prejudice", relating in the main to his pleaded claims for the Restricted Shares and bonus. These are set out by Mr Barnetson in paragraphs 51, 53, 54, 58, 59, 60 and 63 of his first witness statement, and include: | ||||||||||||
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| 13. | I should mention two further matters. | ||||||||||||
| 14. | The first is Miss McMahon's claim in evidence that the "draft Compromise agreement" she presented to Mr Barnetson on 18th November 2005 was marked with the words "without prejudice", and that she drew his attention to that. Mr Barnetson, in evidence, denied any mention of "without prejudice" at the meeting, adding that, in any event, he would not have appreciated its significance. The Judge concluded that there was no evidence on which he could rely to find that there was any reference to the term "without prejudice" at the meeting. Even if there had been, as he recognised, given the wider issue between the parties as to the nature of the negotiations, it could not have been determinative either way, either as to the discussions that day or over the whole period of the negotiations from 28th October 2005 to the end of the year. | ||||||||||||
| 15. | The second matter is that Mr Barnetson, in a letter to Framlington of 13th December 2005, threatened proceedings if the dispute between them was not speedily resolved. Framlington's response was to discontinue the negotiations and, on 20th December, hand him a letter dismissing him as from 31st December, purportedly in accordance with the provision in the contract for early termination on making payments in lieu of notice. That, in turn, prompted Mr Barnetson to issue these proceedings in April 2006 in which the parties have joined issue on, among other matters, the Restricted Shares and his entitlement to bonus. | ||||||||||||
| The application and the Judge's decision | |||||||||||||
| 16. | Before the Judge, Framlington relied, in support of its application for deletion of passages from Mr Barnetson's witness statement, on evidence in the form of witness statements from Mr Kyprianou and Ms McMahon. Ms McMahon also gave oral evidence. Mr Barnetson also put in a second witness statement and gave oral evidence. | ||||||||||||
| 17. | Mr Kyprianou, in his witness statement, stated that the "meetings were aimed at resolving any claims which Mr Barnetson may have had against … [Framlington] upon the termination of his employment, thereby (hopefully) avoiding the prospect of Mr Barnetson bringing formal claims before the courts". Ms McMahon, in her witness statement, described the conversations as "aimed at settling the dispute between … [Framlington] and Mr Barnetson without recourse to the Court". | ||||||||||||
| 18. | Mr Barnetson's evidence, in his second witness statement, was that "the discussions did not start with an attempt to settle a dispute", but that he had agreed to work on the timescale of leaving at the end of the year "and the conversations were concerned with the terms of my departure, in particular a fair bonus for 2005 and my entitlement to Restricted Shares". He also asserted that he had only discovered the meaning of the term "without prejudice" in January 2006 after the negotiations had come to nought and his employment had been terminated. The Judge was to reject that assertion, but also as I have said, to find that when Ms McMahon presented Mr Barnetson with the draft Compromise agreement, on 18th November 2005, she did not expressly draw to his attention that it was "without prejudice". | ||||||||||||
| 19. | The Judge dismissed Framlington's application, holding that the passages to which it objected did not offend the "without prejudice" rule, because the exchanges to which they referred took place before the commencement of litigation or any basis for potential litigation, and, therefore, at a time when there was no dispute. He was of the view that the exchanges were directed simply at an attempt to agree a variation of Mr Barnetson's contract of employment. This is how he put it, at paragraphs 34 and 38 to 41 of his judgment: | ||||||||||||
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| Framlington's case | |||||||||||||
| 20. | Framlington's case, as put on its behalf by Mr Paul Nicholls, was as follows: | ||||||||||||
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| Mr Barnetson's case | |||||||||||||
| 21. | Mr Barnetson's case, as put on his behalf by Mr Peter Oldham, was as follows:- | ||||||||||||
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| The "without prejudice" rule | |||||||||||||
| 22. | Written or oral communications made as part of negotiations genuinely aimed at, but not resulting in, settlement of a dispute are not generally admissible in evidence in litigation between parties over that dispute. It is trite law that the use or non-use of the words "without prejudice" in such negotiations may indicate whether the communication(s) in question may attract the privilege, but is not necessarily determinative on the point; see Phipson, para 24-16 to 24-18. | ||||||||||||
| 23. | The "without prejudice" rule, it is often said, may have two main legal bases. | ||||||||||||
| 24. | The first and more commonly advanced basis is one of public policy, namely, to encourage those in dispute to settle their differences without recourse to or continuation of litigation. It is on this basis for the rule that Framlington mainly rely. The second, albeit of limited application and of doubtful legal respectability,[1] is contractual, that is, where the parties agree expressly or impliedly that it should apply. Framlington also rely on this basis, maintaining that the inclusion in the exchanges of draft "compromise" and "settlement" proposals and counter-proposals suggest an implied agreement that what passed between them and Mr Barnetson was "without prejudice", notwithstanding the Judge's rejection on the evidence before him of an express agreement to that effect. | ||||||||||||
| 25. | However, the main battleground between the parties on the appeal concerned the possible ambit of a "dispute" for this purpose, more particularly, how proximate it must be to litigation to engage the rule. | ||||||||||||
| 26. | The familiar and authoritative starting point for such enquiry is the rationale identified by Lord Griffiths, speaking for the House, in | ||||||||||||
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Although | |||||||||||||
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| 27. | It follows that, for the "without prejudice" rule to give full effect to the public policy underlying it, a dispute may engage the rule, notwithstanding that litigation has not yet begun. If there were any doubt about that bare proposition, it is dispelled by the following authorities and applications of it. | ||||||||||||
| 28. | In | ||||||||||||
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Lord Mance, at paragraph 81, indicated the breadth of the policy, albeit obiter, by reference to Lord Griffiths's observations in | |||||||||||||
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See also per Lord Hoffmann, at paragraph 18, in his reference to the background for the ruling of Court of Appeal in | |||||||||||||
| 29. | A good instance of the working of the rule can be seen in the "opening shot" cases, in which an initial proposal in negotiations before commencement of proceedings may be protected by the privilege. Were it not so, a party to a dispute could never safely make, by way of negotiation, an initial offer in response to a claim; see | ||||||||||||
| 30. | The public policy interest in avoidance of litigation has, with the new Civil Procedure Rules, received firm recognition and support in the "Offers To Settle" provision in Rule 36.10. The courts, when considering matters of costs, must now have regard to offers to settle made before, as well as after, the commencement of proceedings – "one of the cornerstones of the reforms of procedure made by the CPR", as Lord Woolf MR (as he then was) described them in | ||||||||||||
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| Thus, as Longmore LJ pointed out in the course of submissions, the CPR provisions in this respect are predicated on the desirability of "without prejudice" negotiations for settlement taking place before commencement of proceedings. | |||||||||||||
| 31. | Early settlement of disputes is as important in the employment field as elsewhere, notwithstanding the existence of special provisions governing compromise of statutory employment claims. Such restrictions do not bear on the "without prejudice" nature of communications arising in proceedings to which they apply. See e.g. | ||||||||||||
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| 32. | The question remains, how proximate, if at all, must unsuccessful negotiations in a dispute leading to litigation, be to the start of that litigation, to attract the "without prejudice" rule. Must there be, as Mr Oldham contended, an express or implied threat of litigation underlying the negotiations, or, failing any such threat, some proximity in time to the litigation eventually begun? In answering that question, the courts are logically driven back, as Mr Nicholls submitted, to the public policy interest behind the rule, of encouraging parties to settle their disputes without "resort" to litigation or without continuing it until the needless and bitter end. If the privilege were confined to settlement communications once litigation had been threatened or shortly before it is begun, there would be an incentive on both sides to escalate their dispute with threats of litigation and/or to move quickly to it, before they could safely start talking sensibly to each other. That would be a slippery slope to mutual hardening of positions and commencement of litigation – hardly the encouragement to settle their disputes without resort to litigation that Oliver J had in mind in | ||||||||||||
| 33. | On the other hand, the ambit of the rule should not be extended any further than is necessary in the circumstances of any particular case to promote the public policy interest underlying it. The critical question for the court in such a case is where to draw the line between serving that interest and wrongly preventing one or other party to litigation when it comes from putting his case at its best. It is undoubtedly a highly case sensitive question, or put another way, the dividing line may not always be clear. The various judicial pronouncements in the leading cases to which I have referred do not provide any precise pointers, and there are seemingly no other authorities directly in point. | ||||||||||||
| 34. | However, the claim to privilege cannot, in my view, turn on purely temporal considerations. The critical feature of proximity for this purpose, it seems to me, is one of the subject matter of the dispute rather than how long before the threat, or start, of litigation it was aired in negotiations between the parties. Would they have respectively lowered their guards at that time and in the circumstances if they had not thought or hoped or contemplated that, by doing so, they could avoid the need to go to court over the very same dispute? On that approach, which I would commend, the crucial consideration would be whether in the course of negotiations the parties contemplated or might reasonably have contemplated litigation if they could not agree. Confining the operation of the rule, as the Judge did, to negotiations of a dispute in the course of, or after threat of litigation on it, or by reference to some time limit set close before litigation, does not, with respect, fully serve the public policy interest underlying it of discouraging recourse to litigation and encouraging genuine attempts to settle whenever made. | ||||||||||||
| 35. | Most of the judicial observations on the rule and the public policy underlying it have been made in cases where the communications in question were made after litigation had been commenced. However, as I have mentioned, in | ||||||||||||
| 36. | In the light of the guidance derived from the jurisprudence, I have no hesitation in concluding that the Judge was wrong to reject the claim for privilege, as he did in paragraph 38 of the judgment, on the basis that there was no dispute between the end of October and mid-December 2005 because at that stage no litigation had been commenced or threatened. The summary history that I have given of what, on Mr Barnetson's account, had passed between him and Framlington between early March and late October 2005, culminating on 28th October 2005 in Framlington's notification of its intention to dismiss him at the end of the year, demonstrates that they were already well and truly at odds as to his contractual entitlement. All that followed over the next six or so weeks of exchanges, including those the subject of Framlington's claim of privilege, amounted to wrangling over the terms of that entitlement, not discussions as to variation of them as the Judge found. | ||||||||||||
| 37. | The amount of money in issue between the parties and the manner and content of the negotiations were such that both were clearly conscious of the potential for litigation if they could not resolve the dispute without it. As I have indicated, Mr Kyprianou and Ms McMahon's evidence was, in general,[2] of a piece with Mr Barnetson's account of the exchanges – which the Judge accepted. On his evidence, Mr Kyprianou, on 28th October 2005, suggested that they should discuss terms for him to leave Framlington at the end of the year because "there would be no role for him in the new structure". It was a clear indication of Framlington's intention to dismiss him before the expiry of his full contract term, an intention to which Mr Kyprianou and others involved at Framlington adhered throughout the ensuing negotiations. And throughout, Mr Barnetson's stance was that dismissal on the terms proposed by Framlington would be unlawful and/or unfair because they did not conform with his contractual entitlement. It is noteworthy too that, on 13th December 2005, before the final abandonment of the negotiations, he wrote to Framlington, threatening proceedings if the dispute between them was not speedily resolved. | ||||||||||||
| 38. | The resultant picture is one of negotiations arising out of a dispute as to Mr Barnetson's contractual entitlement on his early dismissal, all against the backcloth of potential litigation if they could not resolve the dispute by compromise. It is not a picture of negotiations to vary his contractual entitlement against the possibility that he might not be dismissed after all, or to accommodate the proposed early dismissal, with no thought given on either side to potential litigation if variation were not agreed. | ||||||||||||
| 39. | For those reasons, I am of the view that the exchanges the subject of Framlington's application are covered by the "without prejudice" rule. I would, therefore, allow its appeal and, subject to any matters of detail that may arise on the formulation of the order, direct amendment and re-service by Mr Barnetson of his first witness statement and exhibits to it, as sought by Framlington. | ||||||||||||
| Lord Justice Longmore | |||||||||||||
| 40. | I agree. | ||||||||||||
| Lord Justice Toulson | |||||||||||||
| 41. | I also agree.
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Note 1 See David Vaver, “Without Prejudice” Communications – Their Admissibility And Effect” [1974] U Br Col LR 85, at 97-101, an article commended in Phipson, para 24-14, fn 47 [Back] Note 2 Apart from Ms McMahon’s account as to the mention of the words “without prejudice” at the 18th November meeting. [Back]