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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Miss Elizabeth Gloster QC
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
The Royal Courts of Justice
Date - 9 August 2001
Before:
BETWEEN:
- and -
KANAAR and CO (a firm) Appellant/1st Defendant
| Lord Justice Jonathan Parker : | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| This is the judgment of the court. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Introduction | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1. |
This is an appeal by
Kanaar & Co ("Kanaar"), the first defendant in the action, against an
order made by Miss Elizabeth Gloster QC, sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge
in the Chancery Division, on 19 February 2001. By her order, the judge dismissed
Kanaar's application that the claimant in the action, Mr Hans David de Beer,
give security for its costs of the action. The judge concluded that on the
true construction of the relevant provisions of the Civil Procedure Rules
("the CPR") the court had no jurisdiction to make the order sought. In the
light of that conclusion further questions as to whether the discretion to
order security for costs should be exercised, and if so on what terms, did
not arise.
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| 2. |
Notwithstanding that
Mr de Beer is ordinarily resident in the United States, the judge concluded
that there was no jurisdiction to order security for costs against him since
he currently had assets in Holland and in Switzerland, which states are respectively
parties to the Brussels Conventions and the Lugano Convention (as defined
in section 1(1) of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982Acts). There is
no material difference for present purposes between the provisions of the
Brussels Conventions and those of the Lugano Convention. For convenience we
will refer hereafter to the Brussels Conventions and the Lugano Convention
as "the Conventions", and to states parties to the Conventions or either of
them as "Convention states". The judge held that the fact that Mr de Beer
had assets in a Convention state meant that the court had no jurisdiction
to order him to give security for costs.
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| 3. |
The judge gave permission
to appeal against her dismissal of the application for security for costs,
but refused permission to appeal against her dismissal of two further applications
made by Kanaar. Kanaar applied for permission to appeal against the dismissal
of the other applications, but permission was refused by Jonathan Parker LJ
on the papers on 23 May 2001 and the application for permission has not been
renewed.
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| 4. | Kanaar appears on this appeal by Mr Philip Marshall of counsel; Mr de Beer by Mr Pushpinder Saini of counsel. Both counsel appeared before the judge. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| The background to the dispute | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5. |
Kanaar is a firm of solicitors.
The principal of the firm is Mr Nicholas Kanaar. The second defendant in the
action, Mr Richard Kendall-Bush, is a former solicitor who acted at the material
time (1991) as consultant to Kanaar. On 9 December 1998 Mr Kendall-Bush was
ordered to be struck off the roll of solicitors for serious misconduct arising
out of the transactions which have given rise to the present dispute. Mr de
Beer is a Dutch national who lives in Florida. He is a real estate dealer
and managing director of a company which carries on business in real estate.
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| 6. | In her judgment, the judge summarised the background to, and nature of, the dispute as follows: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| 7. |
The writ was issued on
28 October 1997, shortly before the expiry of the limitation period. On 28
March 2000, following close of pleadings, Master Bowles gave directions for
a case management conference. By an application notice dated 30 June 2000
Kanaar applied for an order that Mr de Beer give security for its costs. The
sum sought by way of security was £130,000, representing Kanaar's estimated
costs to the end of the trial. On 2 November 2000 Master Bowles directed that
Kanaar's application be listed with the case management conference. The case
management conference was held before the judge, and led to the order dismissing
the application against which Kanaar now appeals.
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| 8. |
In his evidence in opposition
to the application Mr de Beer disclosed that he had a right to an interest
in the estate of a deceased person which was in course of being administered
in Holland by executors appointed there, and that he currently owned cash
and equities held by UBS Bank in Switzerland. The situs of Mr de Beer's
interest in the unadministered estate in Holland may have been open to question,
but the judge regarded this as immaterial in the light of evidence that his
assets in Switzerland were worth about £177,000. The judge was accordingly
content to proceed on the footing that the Swiss assets were of sufficient
value to meet any order for costs which might be made in favour of Kanaar.
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| 9. | In the course of the hearing of this appeal Mr Saini told us that the current net value of Mr de Beer's assets in Switzerland was only some US$28,753. He based this assertion on a statement provided by UBS. However, in a Note which he has sent to us since the hearing he informs us that the current value of the Swiss assets is of the order of £162,000. In his Note Mr Saini explains the reason for the error, as follows: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| 10. | Annexed to Mr Saini's Note is a copy of a fax dated 31 July 2001 from UBS to Mr Michael Cohn, Mr de Beer's solicitor. The fax reads as follows (so far as material): | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The provisions
of the Civil Procedure Rules relating to security for costs
| 11. |
The provisions of the
CPR relating to security for costs are to be found in Section II of Part 25
of the CPR, which comprises rules 25.12 to 25.15 inclusive. Rule 25.14 (security
for costs other than from the claimant) and rule 25.15 (security for costs
of an appeal) are not material for present purposes. Rules 25.12 and 25.13 provide as follows (so far as material):
| |
|
|
|
|
| The issues on this appeal 12. |
The primary issue on
this appeal is as to the true meaning and effect of the words in italics in
rule 25.13(2)(ii). More particularly, the primary issue is whether an individual
claimant who currently has assets in a Convention state is "a person against
whom a claim can be enforced" under the Conventions, with the consequence
that there is no jurisdiction under the CPR to make an order that he give
security for costs. We refer to this issue hereafter as "the jurisdiction
issue".
|
13. |
By a Respondent's Notice,
Mr de Beer seeks to uphold the judge's order on the footing that, if (contrary
to his primary submission) the judge had jurisdiction to order security, she
ought as a matter of discretion to have declined to exercise that jurisdiction
in the circumstances of the instant case. Thus, if the jurisdiction issue
is resolved in favour of Kanaar further issues arise as to whether, as a matter
of discretion, security should be ordered, and if so on what terms. We refer
hereafter to these issues compendiously as "the discretion issue".
| |
The judgment
of Miss Elizabeth Gloster QC
|
14. |
Having set out the background
to the matter in the passage which I have quoted, the judge considered what
approach she should adopt to the merits of the claim against Kanaar and of
Kanaar's defence. She expressed her conclusion on that question as follows
(in paragraph 17 of her judgment):
| |
|
15. |
The judge then turned
to the application for security for costs, identifying the first issue for
decision as being whether the court had jurisdiction to make the order sought,
given that Mr de Beer currently had assets in a Convention state (i.e. the
jurisdiction issue). She pointed out that, whether or not Mr de Beer's right
to an interest in the estate being administered in the Netherlands was properly
to be regarded as located in the Netherlands, the existence of assets in Switzerland
sufficed to raise the jurisdiction issue.
|
16. |
After summarising each
side's arguments on the jurisdiction issue, the judge turned to the authorities
as to security for costs as they stood prior to the introduction of the CPR,
under the former Rules of the Supreme Court. She referred to a number of authorities,
including the Court of Appeal decision in | |
|
17. |
For the Irish plaintiffs
it was contended that since the Republic of Ireland was a state party to the
Brussels Conventions, their right to protection against discrimination on
grounds of nationality conferred by articles 6 and 220 of the EC treaty required
the court to disapply rule 1(1)(a). The judge at first instance concluded
that rule 1(1)(a) did not contravene article 6, and ordered the Irish plaintiffs
to give security. The Court of Appeal allowed their appeal, holding that rule
1(1)(a) was covertly discriminatory on the ground of nationality. The leading
judgment was given by Sir Thomas Bingham MR, with whom Waite and Otton LJJ
agreed. In the course of his judgment Sir Thomas Bingham MR referred to the
decision of the European Court in | |
|
18. |
Later in his judgment,
at page 675c, Sir Thomas Bingham MR said this:
| |
|
19. |
The judge in the instant
case went on to observe that by parity of reasoning the same constraint applied
to claimants who were ordinarily resident in states parties to the Lugano
Convention, which contained a non-discrimination provision in similar terms.
|
20. |
The judge then turned
to the relevant provisions of the CPR, and in particular to rule 25.13(2)(ii),
remarking that, apart from an obiter comment by Mr Ian Hunter QC sitting as
a Deputy High Court Judge in | 21. |
The judge continued as
follows:
| |
|
22. |
The judge then turned
to the meaning of the word "claim", concluding (in paragraph 32) that:
| |
|
23. |
The judge acknowledged,
however, that the alternative construction was feasible.
|
24. |
Then, after recording
that it was common ground (a) that, under the Conventions, a judgment obtained
in one Convention state could be enforced in another Convention state by means
of execution against assets of the judgment debtor situated in the latter
state, and (b) that, on the facts of the instant case, a judgment obtained
in the United Kingdom could be enforced against assets of Mr de Beer which
were situated in Switzerland, the judge identified the critical issue as being
whether such enforcement would constitute the enforcement of a claim against
Mr de Beer within the meaning of rule 25.13(2)(ii).
|
25. |
The judge concluded that
it would do so, for five reasons. Her first reason was that in her judgment
the language of the Conventions themselves clearly envisages that the enforcement
in a Convention state of a judgment obtained in another Convention state is
enforcement of a judgment "against" a person, albeit that person is not domiciled
or ordinarily resident in the state in which enforcement is effected. Her
second reason was that had the intention been to adopt a residence-based exclusion
as opposed to an enforceability-based exclusion, the draftsman could easily
have achieved that end by express language. Her third reason was that notwithstanding
that the effect of her construction of the rule was that whereas jurisdiction
to order security for costs would have existed had Mr de Beer's assets been
situated in England, the fact that they were situated in another Convention
state served to exclude such jurisdiction, that "quirk" did not prevent the
court from giving effect to what she considered to be the plain language of
the rule. Her fourth reason was that Kanaar's reliance on the fact that, on
her construction of the rule, a claimant could always avoid having to give
security by the simple expedient of placing an asset (e.g. a cash deposit
refundable on demand) in a Convention state, was misplaced in that:
| |
|
26. |
The judge further concluded
that rule 25.13(2)(g) provided a sufficient safeguard from the suggested abuse.
As to that, she said:
| |
|
27. |
As her fifth reason for
reaching her conclusion as to the true construction of the rule, the judge
considered that the obiter dictum of Mr Ian Hunter QC in the |
28. |
The judge concluded her
judgment on the application for security for costs by saying this:
| |
|
|
The arguments
on the jurisdiction issue
| 29. |
Mr Marshall submits that
on its true construction rule 25.13(2)(a) precludes an order for security
for costs being made against a claimant who is ordinarily resident in a Convention
state, and that it does not preclude such an order being made against a claimant
who is not so resident but who happens to have assets, or an asset, in a Convention
state. He submits, further, that that was the intended meaning of the new
rule, in that the purpose of the new rule was to limit the court's discretion
to order security so as to make it fully compatible with Community law by
providing that no order can be made against a claimant who is ordinarily resident
in a Convention state, thereby avoiding the tension which existed under the
old rules between the court's discretion and article 6 of the EC treaty (see
the judgment of Sir Thomas Bingham MR in |
30. |
In support of this submission
Mr Marshall also relies on a discussion paper circulated by the Lord Chancellor's
Department in 1997, prior to the introduction of the CPR, entitled "Civil
Procedure Rules -- Security for Costs". He also refers to a note to that effect
in Civil Procedure Vol 1 (Autumn 2000). However, the corresponding note in
the current edition (Spring 2001, note 25.13.3 at p.451) is framed in more
circumspect terms, acknowledging that the precise construction of the rule
is not free from doubt.
|
31. |
Mr Marshall relies on
the observation of Mr Ian Hunter QC in the |
32. |
Mr Marshall further submits
that the judge's construction leads to absurd results. By way of example,
he contrasts the position where a US resident has assets in England (in which
case the English courts have jurisdiction to order security) with the position
where his assets are in another Convention state (in which case, if the judge
is right, there is no such jurisdiction). Further, he points out that if the
words "can be enforced" in rule 25.13(2)(ii) envisage enforcement leading
to full recovery (that being the basis on which the judge proceeded) then
the court would be concerned to satisfy itself as a matter of jurisdiction
(a) that, having regard to current values, the asset or assets in question
would be of sufficient value to satisfy an order for costs, and (b) that the
courts in the Convention state or states in which the asset or assets were
situated would enforce any order for costs against such asset or assets.
|
33. |
Mr Marshall submits that
the reference to "a claim" in rule 25.13(2)(ii) is to be contrasted with
the express references to the enforcement of orders for costs in ibid.
subparas (f) and (g). He submits further that, in context, the reference to
the enforcement of "a claim" includes any hypothetical claim for relief, not
necessarily limited to a money claim. He submits that only if a person is
ordinarily resident in a Convention state can it be said that any hypothetical
claim for relief is capable of being enforced against him in that state. Such
a construction would, he submits, be fully workable.
|
34. |
Mr Marshall also relies
on two authorities decided since the judge delivered her judgment, namely
the decision of Brooke LJ in |
35. |
In | |
|
36. |
Brooke LJ went on to
cite a passage from the judgment of Lightman J in | |
|
37. |
In |
38. |
In paragraph 35 of his
judgment, Mance LJ commented that the requirement of rule 25.13(2)(i) that
the claimant should be ordinarily resident out of the jurisdiction mirrors
a ground for ordering security for costs against a plaintiff under the old
rules. He continued:
| |
|
39. |
In paragraph 46 of his
judgment Mance LJ said this:
| |
|
40. |
In paragraph 57 of his
judgment Mance LJ referred to the distinction drawn in the CPR between claimants
resident within and outside Convention states. He continued:
| |
|
41. |
Turning to the considerations
relevant to the exercise of the discretion itself, Mance LJ observed (in paragraph
58 of his judgment) that:
| |
|
42. |
In paragraph 61 of his
judgment, Mance LJ said this:
| |
|
43. |
Later, in paragraph 62
of his judgment Mance LJ said this:
| |
|
44. |
In paragraph 65 of his
judgment Mance LJ noted that no evidence had been put before the court to
suggest that the defendants would face any difficulty in enforcing an order
for costs against the claimant in the United States, but he went on to infer
(in paragraph 66) that some extra costs would be involved. Accordingly in
paragraph 67 of his judgment he said this:
| |
|
45. |
Mr Marshall relies on
both these recent decisions as supporting the view that the purpose and effect
of rule 25.13(2)(ii) is to exclude from the scope of the court's discretion
claimants who are ordinarily resident in a Convention state, and that the
rationale of that rule is the aspirational "single legal market" made up of
Convention states and the ease with which judgments obtained in one Convention
state may be enforced in another.
|
46. |
Mr Marshall accordingly
submits that, construing the rule in accordance with its purpose and its natural
meaning and so as to avoid absurdity, it must mean that jurisdiction is excluded
where the individual claimant is ordinarily resident in another Convention
state.
| 47. |
In the alternative, if
(contrary to his primary submissions) the word "claim" in the new rule is
to be treated as a reference to a specific prospective judgment or order for
costs in these proceedings, Mr Marshall nevertheless repeats his submissions
as to the meaning and effect of the words "can be enforced".
|
48. |
Mr Saini supports the
reasoning and conclusion of the judge on the jurisdiction issue. He submits
that the purpose of the condition in rule 25.13(2)(ii) is to prevent security
being awarded against individual claimants who have assets in Convention states
which can be used for the purpose of enforcement of costs orders made in this
jurisdiction. He submits that the condition is "enforceability-based" as opposed
to "residence-based". He further submits that the construction contended for
by Kanaar wholly ignores the plain wording of the condition and requires,
in effect, that the condition be substantially rewritten. He also relies on
subparagraph (g) of the condition as extending the jurisdiction to cover cases
in which a claimant seeks to shelter his assets from an application for security
for costs.
| 49. |
Mr Saini submits that
the relevant question for the court is whether the "person" referred to in
the rule is a person against whom a claim can be enforced under the Conventions,
wherever his residence may be, and that in deciding whether a "claim" can
be enforced the court has to consider (a) whether the claim is of a type which
can be enforced under the Conventions and (b) whether the claimant has assets
in a Convention state against which execution can issue.
|
50. |
As to the two recent
authorities relied on by Mr Marshall ( |
51. |
We should record that,
although we raised the point in the course of argument, and despite the focus
which the Conventions place on domicile, neither side sought to put forward
any argument based on domicile.
| |
Conclusions
on the jurisdiction issue
|
52. |
The drafting of Rule
25.13(2)(ii) is on any footing unsatisfactory, and its meaning is not entirely
clear. This has enabled each side to say with force that had the draftsman
intended to achieve the result contended for by the other he could easily
have done so by the use of clear words.
|
53. |
The particular words
which give rise to difficulty are the words ".... a person against whom a
claim can be enforced ...." The concept of a "claim" being "enforced" is not
an altogether happy one, since one would normally speak of a claim being "brought"
and of a judgment or order being "enforced". So the question arises which
construction takes precedence: that is to say, whether (as the judge concluded)
"a claim" is to be construed as meaning a judgment or order (i.e., in the
context of security for costs, a judgment or order for costs), or whether
"enforced" is to be construed as meaning "brought". Taking the words in isolation
and out of context, either construction could be the correct one. For that
reason alone, we regard the judge's reference (at paragraph 36(3) of her judgment)
to "the plain language of the provision" as somewhat misplaced.
|
54. |
That being so, it becomes
important to consider the relevant context; that is to say the background
against which the new rule came to be introduced. In this connection, we consider
that it is legitimate to have regard to the mischief which was perceived to
exist under the old rule.
|
55. |
As noted earlier, the
|
56. |
If, therefore, we are
entitled to give a purposive construction to the new rule – and we consider
that we are so entitled – we take the purpose of subparagraph (a)(ii) to be
to eliminate any covert discrimination against nationals of other Convention
States which would or might have existed had subparagraph (a)(ii) not been
included as part of the condition – that is to say, had condition (a) read
simply "the claimant is an individual who is ordinarily resident out of the
jurisdiction".
|
57. |
On that footing, we return
to the wording of the subparagraph. In the first place, it seems to us entirely
legitimate, as well as being consistent with what we have taken to be the
purpose of the subparagraph, to construe the words "a claim" in a general
sense; that is to say, as including any claim (whether or not a money claim)
and not limited to an order for costs. Such a construction is also consistent
with the other conditions in rule 25.13(2), all of which are directed at claimants
of a particular kind, rather than at execution against assets. Even paragraph
(g), which relates to the sheltering of assets, is expressed in terms of a
particular category of claimant rather than by reference to the assets themselves.
|
58. |
In our judgment, rule
25.13(2) is directed at what we may call the juridical characteristics of
the particular individual claimant, irrespective of what assets he may currently
own or where those assets may currently be situated. We further conclude that
condition (a), on its true construction, confines the jurisdiction to order
security for costs to cases where the claimant is an individual who is not
ordinarily resident either in this jurisdiction or in that of a Convention
state. It follows that, in our judgment, such a claimant cannot deprive the
court of jurisdiction merely by placing an asset in a Convention state.
|
59. |
We take that to be the
construction of the rule adopted by Brooke LJ reached in |
60. |
We are also fortified
in our conclusion by a consideration of the implications of the construction
of the rule favoured by the judge.
|
61. |
In the first place, it
seems to us that a jurisdiction which is based upon such ephemeral considerations
as the values and the situs of a claimant's assets current at the date
when an application for security is heard would pose very considerable practical
difficulties both for litigants and for the court. If the existence of the
jurisdiction were to depend upon whether or not there was a reasonable prospect
of full recovery of costs from the assets in question (that being the basis
on which the judge proceeded) then the existence of the jurisdiction would
appear to depend not only upon the values of the assets from time to time,
but, one presumes, also the defendant's estimates of the amount of the costs
which the claimant might be ordered to pay. Both may be expected to vary from
time to time. By way of example, had Mr Saini's initial information as to
the current value of Mr de Beer's Swiss assets been correct an extraordinary
position would have been reached, in that (on the judge's construction) there
would currently be jurisdiction to order security whereas at the date of the
hearing before the judge the value of the Swiss assets was sufficient to exclude
jurisdiction.
|
62. |
We further agree with
Mr Marshall that the judge's construction would produce the extraordinary
result that whilst jurisdiction would exist to order security for costs against
a US resident with assets in this jurisdiction (but in no other Convention
state), no such jurisdiction would exist if he moved those assets to another
Convention state.
|
63. |
We accordingly conclude,
in disagreement with the judge, that the court has jurisdiction under rule
25.13(1) to order security for costs to be given by Mr de Beer by reason of
the fact that he is an individual claimant who is (a) ordinarily resident
out of the jurisdiction and (b) not ordinarily resident in a Convention state.
We accordingly allow the appeal.
|
64. |
It follows that we must
now move on to consider whether the jurisdiction which we have held to exist
should be exercised, and if so on what terms: that is to say, to address the
discretion issue.
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The discretion
issue
|
65. |
Mr Marshall submits that
in considering whether to exercise its discretion to order security it is
material for the court to consider whether there is a want of probity on the
part of Mr de Beer. In support of this submission Mr Marshall cites a passage
from the judgment of Lightman J in the | |
|
66. |
Mr Marshall goes on to
submit that want of probity on the part of Mr de Beer is demonstrated in the
instant case (a) by the fact that triable allegations of dishonesty are made
against him and (b) by the fact that he has made grossly and demonstrably
misleading statements in his witness statement concerning his assets in Florida.
|
67. |
He further submits that,
on the authority of Lightman J's observations in |
68. |
Mr Marshall also relies
on observations made by Bingham LJ in | |
|
69. |
Mr Marshall submits that
a similar risk exists in the instant case, and that accordingly security should
be ordered.
|
70. |
As to the enforceability
in Florida of an order for costs made in this jurisdiction, Mr Marshall referred
us to the witness statement of a Mr Litsky, an American lawyer and Kanaar's
expert witness, to the effect that although a costs order made by the English
court is a type of judgment which is prima facie capable of recognition in
Florida pursuant to a Florida statute, nevertheless Mr de Beer could argue
that the statute does not apply on the ground that the order was obtained
by fraud, alternatively on grounds of non-reciprocity. Mr Litsky's opinion
is that such challenges by Mr de Beer could involve a fully argued hearing,
possibly involving disclosure and expert evidence on English law.
|
71. |
As to Mr de Beer's Swiss
assets, in a Note sent to us after the hearing by way of response to Mr Saini's
Note (referred to earlier in this judgment), Mr Marshall submits that on the
available documentary material there must be considerable doubt whether enforcement
could be effected in Switzerland against the shares in Apogee Technology Inc.,
since the situs of the shares would appear to be the United States.
At all events, he points out, there is no evidence either that the company
was incorporated in Switzerland or that it maintains a register of members
there. Mr Marshall further submits that the share certificate could easily
be moved, or the shares themselves disposed of. Finally in relation to the
Swiss assets, Mr Marshall says that the court below was never informed that
the Swiss assets included shares in an American company, and that in consequence
it was (as he puts it) extremely doubtful that they would be capable of being
realised by enforcement in Switzerland.
|
72. |
Mr Marshall accordingly
submits that security should be ordered in the sum of £130,000, on the footing
that that is a reasonable estimate of the amount of Kanaar's costs up to the
end of the trial.
|
73. |
Mr Saini accepts that
£130,000 is a reasonable estimate of Kanaar's costs up to the end of the trial,
but he submits that in the circumstances it would not be just to order any
security; alternatively he submits that if security is to be ordered at all
it should be ordered in a much smaller sum, proportionate to the degree of
risk which Kanaar faces. In this connection, Mr Saini relies on Mance LJ's
reference in paragraph 67 of his judgment in |
74. |
Mr Saini submits that
the mere fact that an allegation of dishonesty is made against Mr de Beer
on the pleadings cannot justify the court in proceeding on the footing that
there is any want of probity on Mr de Beer's part. As to Mr de Beer's witness
statement, Mr Saini accepts that it contains a misleading statement as to
his assets in Florida, but he submits that there is no reason to infer that
the statement was deliberately misleading; in any event, he submits, the witness
statement establishes that Mr de Beer has substantial assets in Florida.
|
75. |
As to possible difficulties
of enforcement, Mr Saini referred us to the witness statement of Mr Louis
Stinson, Mr de Beer's expert witness as to American law. In a short witness
statement, Mr Stinson confirms that an order for costs made by an English
court would be capable of enforcement in Florida in accordance with the Florida
statute. He further states that the costs of enforcement in Florida "assuming
no dispute as to recognition or enforceability of the judgment" would be relatively
modest.
|
76. |
Mr Saini submits that
in the light of Mr Stinson's evidence the court should proceed on the footing
that there is no significant risk that enforcement of an order for costs may
prove more difficult, or materially more expensive, in Florida.
|
77. |
As to enforcement of
an order for costs against Mr de Beer's Swiss assets, Mr Saini relies on paragraph
32 of the judgment of Mr Ian Hunter QC in the | |
|
78. |
Mr Saini submits that
there is no basis in the instant case for any suggestion that Kanaar would
have difficulty in enforcing an order for costs in Switzerland, and he points
to the fact that on current values the Swiss assets (including the shares
in Apogee Technology Inc) are worth some £162,000.
|
79. |
We accept Mr Saini's
submission that the mere fact that Kanaar made serious allegations of dishonesty
against Mr de Beer does not justify this court in proceeding on the footing
that he lacks probity. On the other hand, we take a serious view of the misleading
statement in his witness statement to which Mr Marshall has drawn our attention.
|
80. |
In paragraph 44 of his
witness statement, which is dated 27 October 2000, under the heading "Personal
Finances", Mr de Beer says this:
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|
81. |
In a witness statement
dated 4 December 2000 Mr Julian Aylmer, Kanaar's solicitor, states that he
caused an investigator to visit the property in question, and that the investigator
confirmed that it was up for sale. This drew a response from Mr Cohn (Mr de
Beer's solicitor). In paragraph 3.4 of his witness statement dated 8 December
2000 Mr Cohn says this:
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|
82. |
Mr Cohn then exhibits
a letter from the agent dated 6 December 2000, addressed to Mr de Beer, in
which the agent confirms that the house has been on the market "for some months"
at a price of US$895,000. In the final paragraph of his letter, the agent
says:
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|
83. |
In our judgment, the
evidence of Mr Cohn, coupled with the letter from the agent, establishes that
Mr de Beer's evidence about the property in Fort Lauderdale is materially
misleading in what it does not say. It does not say that the property had
been placed on the market for sale. It does not say that it was being marketed
at a price substantially less than US$1.2 million. It does not say that although
offers have been received, none has matched the asking price. It does not
say that the valuation of US$1.2 million represents Mr de Beer's personal
opinion of the value of the property (still less that it is an opinion which
does not appear to be shared by the market). Moreover, it is difficult to
see how Mr de Beer's evidence in this respect could have been other than deliberately
misleading. In the circumstances, we take the view that it places a serious
question mark over the reliability of the remainder of his evidence.
|
84. |
Moreover, it appears
from the evidence of Mr Litsky (which is not directly challenged in this respect
by Mr Stinson) that there is, to put it at its lowest, a risk that an order
for costs in Kanaar's favour may be difficult or even impossible to enforce
in Florida.
|
85. |
As to enforcement against
Mr de Beer's Swiss assets, we are concerned that the court below may not have
been told that by far the most valuable of these assets is the shareholding
in Apogee Technology Inc. Certainly no mention of this fact is made in Mr
de Beer's witness statement dated 27 October 2000, where he merely says:
| |
|
86. |
It seems to us that if
the court below was not told that the Swiss assets included the shares in
Apogee Technology Inc it plainly should have been, if only because (to put
it at its lowest) it is by no means self-evident that an order for costs could
be enforced in Switzerland against shares in an American company. However,
not having heard oral submissions on the question of possible non-disclosure,
it would not be appropriate for us to form any view on that question.
|
87. |
The terms of the fax
from UBS dated 31 July 2001, a copy of which is annexed to Mr Saini's Note
and the material parts of which we have quoted earlier in this judgment, also
appear to raise doubts as to whether an order for costs could be enforced
against the shares in Switzerland. On the face of it, unless and until Mr
de Beer signs the requisite form, UBS cannot part with the share certificate
other than to Mr de Beer.
|
88. |
Once again, however,
we take the view that since we have not heard oral argument on this question
it would not be appropriate for us to form any view about it. In the circumstances
we propose to proceed on the basis, favourable to Mr de Beer, that so far
as enforcement of a costs order in Switzerland is concerned, the shares stand
on the same footing as the other assets held by UBS.
|
89. |
However, whilst we are
content to proceed on the footing that there is in principle no reason to
suppose that an order for costs might not be fully enforceable in Switzerland,
we must also take into account the ease with which the assets presently held
there may be moved. This applies to the Apogee shares as it does to the other
assets.
|
90. |
In all the circumstances,
we conclude that Kanaar is at risk of being unable to enforce an order for
costs against Mr de Beer, whether in part or at all, due either to lack of
available assets against which such an order could be enforced, or to the
unenforceability of such an order in Florida, or both.
|
91. |
We further conclude that
it is just in all the circumstances that Kanaar should be protected against
that risk by the making of an order that Mr de Beer give security for its
costs of the action to the end of the trial. Bearing in mind the nature and
potential size of the risk, and given that Mr Saini's accepts that the proposed
figure of £130,000 represents a reasonable estimate of Kanaar's costs up to
the end of the trial, we order that security be given in that sum.
|
92. |
We will hear counsel
further as to the precise form of the order, in the event that it cannot be
agreed.
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