Case summarIES
The
following key indicates the court to which the case reference refers:
JRC Royal
Court of Jersey
GRC Royal
Court of Guernsey
JCA Jersey
Court of Appeal
GCA Guernsey
Court of Appeal
JPC Privy
Council, on appeal from Jersey
GPC Privy
Council, on appeal from Guernsey
CIVIL PROCEDURE
Discovery—electronic
discovery—costs order against advocates
The Law Trust Ltd v JTC Trust Co Ltd [2020] JRC
212 (Royal Ct: Thompson, Master of the Royal Court)
SMJ Chiddicks and PC Sinel for the plaintiff and third parties;
MC Goulborn for the defendant.
In proceedings in which the plaintiff, as current
trustee, alleged breaches of duty by the defendant, as former trustee, the parties’
advocates exchanged correspondence on the question of discovery. The plaintiff’s
advocates took the view that electronic discovery was necessary. The defendant’s
advocates replied that the quantity of documents did not justify a costly
discovery exercise. The Master had by letter reminded the parties of the
requirements in respect of discovery and electronic discovery. Proactive
obligations in relation to the conduct of directions hearings are set out in
Practice Direction RC 17/05 and, in relation to electronic discovery, Practice
Direction RC 17/08. The Practice Direction then sets out in more detail what
information is to be provided. The matter came before the Master at an
adjourned directions hearing.
Held:
(1) Failings of parties’ advocates
regarding discovery
(a) The Master did not
have sufficient information from either party to decide whether or not
electronic discovery was required and whether discovery should be limited. In
order to advance an argument that electronic discovery was not necessary, a
business with the level of sophistication of the defendant needed to explain
what systems were held, how much relevant data relating to the dispute was
stored on those systems and what was the most effective way of approaching
discovery. The defendant’s approach fell significantly short of what was
expected and did not comply with the general obligations of a party and advisers
at a directions hearing. Nor had the plaintiff provided sufficient information.
In particular, although the plaintiff and third parties had concluded that an
electronic discovery exercise was required, the information required by paras
11 and 13 of Practice Direction RC 17/08 had not been supplied in advance of
the hearing. This information was essential so that the court could make an
informed decision.
(b)
In all the circumstances, the matter ought not to be adjourned and a general
discovery order was made, albeit that once the required information pursuant to
Practice Direction RC 17/08 was provided, it was open to any party to come back
and seek to vary that order.
(2) Costs order against parties’
advocates
(a)
The starting point was the overriding objective contained in r.1/6 of the Royal
Court Rules. Rule 1/6(5) provides “The Court must further the overriding
objective by actively managing cases”. This included managing the process
of electronic discovery and whether discovery should be limited so that the
obligations on parties are proportionate. Rule 1/6(4) provides that “The
parties are required to help the Court to further the overriding objective”.
The Master concluded that includes legal representatives and, to the extent
there was any doubt about this, para 17 of Practice Direction RC 17/05 states “If
any party or its adviser is unprepared for a directions hearing the Court may
make such wasted costs orders as are appropriate”. The general principles
set out in Practice Direction RC 17/08 for discovery of documents held in
electronic form made it clear that legal representatives as well as parties
should have regard to the general principles. Similarly, the obligations in
paras 10 to 17 of this Practice Direction apply to legal representatives as
much as parties. Advocates also owe a responsibility to the court to ensure that
a client’s discovery obligations are met (see para 20 of Practice
Direction RC 17/07 on discovery and Hanby v Oliver,
explored in Haddad v GB Trustees Ltd).
(b)
The court had wide powers in making costs orders, contained in art 2(1) of the
Civil Proceedings (Jersey) Law 1956. Ultimately what costs order is made is
about doing justice between the parties. Rules of procedure should be complied
with: Reg’s Skips v Yates
in which a personal costs order against an advocate was made.
(c)
In the light of his findings in this case, the Master ordered that costs of the
directions hearing should be borne by the parties’ legal advisers
themselves. This was in contrast to the usual order made on a directions
hearing, which would be costs in the cause, absent serious adversarial argument
on a particular issue.
CONFLICT OF
LAWS
Forum non
conveniens
MB and Services Ltd v United Company Rusal
plc [2020] JRC 034 (Royal Ct: Birt, Commr and Jurats Olsen and Pitman)
WAF Redgrave for the plaintiffs; ECP Mackereth for the
defendant.
The plaintiffs commenced proceedings in Jersey against
the defendant, a Jersey company, for breach of confidence and conspiracy to
injure relating to unlawful use of confidential information and/or infringement
of patents held by the first plaintiff. The defendant now sought to have these
proceedings stayed on the ground of forum non conveniens, it being
contended that the Russian courts were both available and clearly or distinctly
the appropriate forum to hear the action.
Held:
(1)
Applicable principles
(a)
These were to be found in Spiliada Maritime Corp v Cansulex Ltd,
and summarized in Federal Republic of Brazil v Durant International Corp:
the court is concerned to establish which is the appropriate forum for the
trial of the action, i.e., that in
which the case may be tried most suitability in the interests of all the
parties and the ends of justice. Lord Goff also approved use of the expression “the
natural forum” as being that with which the action had the most real and
substantial connection. This generally requires summary examination of the
connecting factors, such as matters of practical convenience (accessibility to
courts, parties and witnesses and the availability of a common language) and
the system of law to be applied to the issues, the place of wrongful act or
omission and the place of harm: Supreme Court in Lungowe v Vedanta Resources
plc.
(b)
Where, as in this case, proceedings are brought as of right because the
defendant is resident in the jurisdiction, the burden on the defendant is not
just to show that Jersey is not the natural or appropriate forum for the trial,
but to establish that there is another available forum which is clearly or
distinctly more appropriate than Jersey. In this way, proper regard is paid to
the fact that jurisdiction has been founded in Jersey as of right.
(c)
In some cases, the international nature of the dispute in question may mean
that there is no natural forum. There is no reason why English courts should
not refuse to grant a stay in such cases where jurisdiction has been founded as
of right: Spiliada, at 47.
(d)
The exercise which the court undertakes when considering the appropriate forum
is limited: Spiliada at 465; VTB Capital plc v Nutritek
International Corp.
(e)
There is then a second limb to the forum non conveniens test. Even
though the court has concluded that there is another available forum which prima
facie is clearly more appropriate, it will not grant a stay if there is a
real risk that justice will not be obtained in the foreign court. The burden of
showing this falls upon the plaintiff.
(2)
Decision as to appropriate forum. In this case, the residence of
witnesses, the relevant documentation and the need for translation into English
all pointed to Russia as the appropriate forum; and so did, in particular, the
fact that the claims for breach of confidence and in the tort of conspiracy,
upon analysis under the principles of private international law, were subject
to Russian law as the proper law. The defendant therefore satisfied the court
that Russia was distinctly or clearly the forum which had the most real and
substantial connection and in which the case may be tried most suitably in the
interest of the parties and the ends of justice.
(3)
Decision as to risk of injustice. Comity required the court to be
extremely cautious in reaching such conclusion (AK Investment CJSC v Kyrgyz
Mobil Tel Ltd)
and focus on the facts of the case (Deripaska v Cherney).
The experts for each party in this case were agreed that the Russian
(Arbitrazh) court was not immune to external or political influence, albeit
that this was rare. The difficulty was therefore knowing where the limits of
such influence were (as noted by Christopher Clarke J in Cherney v Deripaska.
On the particular evidence of what had already occurred in this case, coupled
with the involvement and character of Mr. Oleg Deripaska, who still had a
substantial interest in the defendant and who was close to the Russian state,
the court concluded that there was a real risk that the plaintiffs would not
receive justice if this particular case were heard in Russia. Accordingly,
although the defendants had discharged the burden of showing that Russia was
clearly or distinctly a more appropriate forum than Jersey, the court would not
stay the current Jersey proceedings.
SOLICITORS
Disciplinary
proceedings—striking off
Att Gen v Manning [2019] JRC 171 (Royal Ct:
Birt, Commr and Jurats Ramsden, Thomas, Ronge, Christensen and Austin-Vautier)
M Temple, Q.C., Solicitor General appeared for the
Crown; EL Burns for the respondent.
The respondent, a solicitor (écrivain) of
the Royal Court, had been sentenced to a total of 3½ years imprisonment
in respect of twenty counts of fraudulent conversion, one count of fraudulent
conversion by a trustee and one count of failing to comply with the
requirements of the Money Laundering (Jersey) Order 2008. The money was taken
from client accounts held for curatorships and a trust in order to pay for obligations
of other clients owing to a deficit in his general client account. The Attorney
General now applied for an order that the respondent be removed from the roll
of solicitors of the Royal Court, pursuant to the inherent jurisdiction of the court,
which is expressly preserved by art 32 of the Law Society of Jersey Law 2005.
Held:
(1)
The respondent had on numerous occasions fraudulently converted money from
client accounts. The fact that he used the money to pay for obligations of other
clients rather than for his own personal expenditure was beside the point. The court
observed that members of the public are entitled to expect that moneys placed
with members of the legal profession on client account are entirely safe. If a
lawyer steals or fraudulently converts money which is held for a client, he or
she be will be struck off. Such an approach was required for the purpose
referred to by Bingham MR in Bolton v Law Society,
namely that there should be amongst members of the public a well-founded
confidence that any lawyer whom they instruct will be a person of
unquestionable integrity, probity and trustworthiness.
(2) Following Bolton, and in Jersey Att Gen
v Michel,
there was therefore no alternative to striking off the respondent from the roll
of solicitors, and the court so ordered.
STATUTES
Interpretation—retrospective effect
In re Tantular [2020]
JCA 013 (CA: McNeill (President); Martin, and Williams JJA)
TVR Hanson for the appellants;
AJ Belhomme for the first respondent; CFD Sorensen for the Viscount; MW Cook
for the third respondent.
The appellants sought costs
against the Attorney General following their successful appeal in the case of In
re Tantular.
The question was raised as to whether the Attorney General was protected
against an order for costs by art 2 of the International Co-operation
(Protection from Liability) (Jersey) Law 2018. Article 2 protects a public
authority in Jersey from liability in damages, costs and consequential claims
when providing assistance in good faith pursuant to a request made by a
relevant authority of a country or territory outside Jersey under certain
scheduled legislation. Aside from the issue of retrospectivity, the Attorney
General would, in this case, have fallen within the category or persons who
could benefit from the provisions of the 2018 Law. However, the 2018 Law had only
come into force on the day of the Royal Court’s judgment which had been
the subject of the appeal and the question was therefore raised as to whether
it applied to an application for costs
Held, as to the issue of retrospectivity:
(1) The proper approach was not to decide what
label to apply to the legislative provision, procedural or otherwise, but to
see whether the statute, if applied retrospectively, to a particular type of
case, would impair existing rights and obligations: Yew Bon Tew v Kenderaan
Bas Mara.
The principle against retrospective effect protected accrued rights or
obligations from retrospective alteration, unless it were sufficiently clear
that such an alteration had been intended. The strength of that presumption
varied in different circumstances and it was not normally regarded as
applicable to purely procedural provisions: Warren v Att Gen.
(2) Absent special circumstances, a party to
litigation enjoys, from the outset, a right to seek costs. Similarly, and again
absent special provisions, a party to litigation is taken to be aware from the
outset that there is a potential liability for costs. Further, the right to
seek costs was also an asset in respect of which there could be a valid
assignment (such as would highly likely to be part of any agreement between a
litigant and a third-party funder). To give the 2018 Law retrospective effect
would therefore deprive the appellants in this case of an asset, the accrual of
which right had in fact already been recognised by a prior order in these
proceedings which, in general terms, had left over consideration of liability
for costs.
(3) In some circumstances someone acquiring an
asset which, of its nature, is subject to legislative controls as to the rights
and responsibilities of the owners of such assets, or changes in the law as
stated by the courts, may not be able to claim that she or he should be immune
from changes in legal rules. This could apply, for example, in relation to
existing families, the ownership of property or the employment of a workforce
or taxation on a source of income arranged before the date of imposition of the
tax. This did not apply here. A specific right had accrued and the construction
contended for by the Attorney General would deprive the appellants of that
right.
(4) In the whole circumstances there was therefore
no compelling reason to confer retrospective effect upon the 2018 Law. Upon an
ordinary construction, art 2 related to “any act done in the discharge or purported discharge of the public
authority’s functions under any enactment specified in Schedule 1”
after the coming into force of the provision. It was true that the appellate proceedings
had taken place subsequent to coming into force of the 2018 Law but they were
not affected by art 2. To a great extent, the work of an appellate court is to
appraise the determination and orders of the court of first instance and, where
appropriate, to correct what, in its judgment, are errors in the determination;
albeit there may be occasions where new issues emerge. In this case, art 2 of
the 2018 Law did not operate to relieve the Attorney General of liability for
the costs of the appeal as “any
act done in the discharge or purported discharge of the public
authority’s functions” had not been separate from, but
merely a continuation of, the stance at first instance.