Sun Valley Foods Limited v Vincent: 2000

The court considered the grant of ‘springboard relief’. Jonathan Parker J said: ‘For reasons which I have already explained, there is no room for doubt that the defendants have made unlawful use of material in which Sun Valley/Fields has a proprietary interest. But, as Nourse L.J. explained in Bullivant, that in itself is not enough to found a claim for ‘springboard’ relief. Sun Valley also has to establish (a) that the defendants thereby gained unfair competitive advantage over Sun Valley ‘to use the words of Roxburgh J.’ (an ‘unfair start’) and (b) as of today that advantage still exists and will continue to have effect unless the relief sought is granted.
It is, therefore, necessary to consider on the evidence as it stands (and, of necessity, without the benefit of cross-examination) the extent to which the unlawful copying of Fields’ material assisted the defendants in starting up Fusion’s business and in thereby shortening the start-up period.
In undertaking this task, I must bear in mind that there was nothing unlawful in the individual defendants making use of their own expertise and experience in setting up in competition with Sun Valley/Fields immediately following their resignations. In those respects, a ‘seamless transaction’ from Fields to Fusion was a legitimate aim which cannot found an application for ‘springboard’ relief.’

Judges:

Jonathan Parker J

Citations:

[2000] FSR 825

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedWhitmar Publications Ltd v Gamage and Others ChD 4-Jul-2013
Whitmar claimed damages for breach of contract; an account of profits; damages for breach of fiduciary duty and/or for infringement of its Database Rights under the Copyright and Rights in Database Regulations 1997; and for a permanent injunction . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment, Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.619038

CRE v Justis Publishing Ltd: 20 Mar 2017

The defendant company published case law. The claimant’s case had been anonymised, but the defendant published a version of the judgment from which it was possible to identify him (or her). An order had been made to transfer the case to the County Court, but the claimant applied to have the order set aside.
Held: At the time the M and CL (Media and Communications List) was only just established. The court recorded its views that: ‘It seems to me to be strongly in the interests of justice that this matter be heard by a specialist judge, and that with the advent of the media and communications list (which was only announced after Master Price’s order was made), such a specialist list has now become available, and it seems to me to be the most appropriate forum.
Furthermore, the Chancery Division does not seem to be the appropriate tribunal given the matters raised by the claim and the defendants forthcoming application for summary judgement.’

Judges:

Deputy Master Arkush

Citations:

Unreported

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMezvinsky and Another v Associated Newspapers Ltd ChD 25-May-2018
Choice of Division and Business Lists
Claim that the publication of pictures of the young children of the celebrity claimants had been published by the defendant on-line without consent and without pixelation, in breach of their human rights, of data protection, and right to privacy. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.616907

Vint v Hudspith: 1885

In the Chancery division, and where judgment has been entered in default, the proper challenge is by request to the judge to set aside his judgment. Though an appeal to the Court of Appeal is possible, such appeals will be discouraged.

Citations:

(1885) 29 ChD 322

Cited by:

CitedS v Suren and Another QBD 10-Sep-2004
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.549470

Pinnock Bros v Lewis and Peat Ltd: 1923

Roche J said as to Ayscough: ‘In that case the arbitrator decided – whether rightly or wrongly is immaterial for present purposes – that by reason of a clause as to time contained in the contract, the plaintiffs had no claim, and therefore he dismissed it. In the present case, the arbitrator merely decided that he had no jurisdictio, and that being in the award does not and cannot determine the substance of the plaintiff’s claim.’
Later he said: ‘The mere presence of an arbitration clause is no defence to an action on the contract.An award following on the arbitration clause mnay be an answer to the claim, and it will be an answer where it deal with the claim

Judges:

Roche J

Citations:

[1923] 1 KB 690

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.509129

Case LIII: 1220

If the teste of the original writ of covenant is after the conusance in the case of a fine ; and so for the common recovery as to the teste of the writ of entry in the post ; they are amenable : for these are manifest mistakes of the clerk, although it was taken otherwise in the 39 Eliz. yet it was resolved as above the 41 Eliz. Note the Book of Entries, 252. Fines are commonly acknowledged, arid after the caption, the writ of covenant entered with the antedate.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 665, (1220-1623) Jenk 258, (1220) 145 ER 184 (A)

Links:

Commonlii

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.461577

Ex parte Mwenya: CA 1959

A writ of habeas corpus might issue to Northern Rhodesia.
Such a writ of should only be issued where it can be regarded as ‘proper and efficient’ to do so. However, it remains ‘the most efficient protection yet developed for the liberty of the subject’. The reach of the writ depended not on formal notions of territorial sovereignty, but rather on the practical question of ‘the exact extent and nature of the jurisdiction or dominion exercised in fact by the Crown.’
Lord Parker said: ‘Reliance was further placed by the applicant on Barnardo v Ford and Rex v Secretary of State for Horne Affairs, Ex p O’Brien. Both those cases are authority for the proposition that the writ will issue not only to the actual gaoler but to a person who has power or control over the body. Further, in O’Brien’s case the writ was issued to the Secretary of State for Home Affairs, who had in fact handed the physical custody of the body over to the Government of the Irish Free State. It is clear, however, from the facts of that case, that the Secretary of State had not only been responsible for the original detention but that there were strong grounds for thinking that in handing over the body to the Government of the Irish Free State he had not lost all control over it. In those circumstances the court decided to issue the writ in order that the full facts could be investigated and argument heard on the return.
The position here is quite different. The restriction orders under which the applicant is detained were not made by the Secretary of State. His approval or consent was not required and there is no evidence that he took any part in the detention. No doubt the writ will issue not only to a person who has the actual custody but also to a person who has the constructive custody in the sense of having power and control over the body. Here, however, we can find no custody by the Secretary of State in any form.’ (obiter) said: ‘Finally, we should mention another point that was raised, namely, that even if the Secretary of State could be regarded as the custodian of the body the writ would not issue to a custodian in this country where the original and present detention was, as in the present case, in a foreign territory . .’

Judges:

Lord Evershed MR, Lord Parker

Citations:

[1960] 1 QB 241, [1959] 3 All ER 525

Citing:

CitedBarnardo v Ford HL 1892
A boy who had been ‘found destitute and homeless’ by a ‘clergyman residing in Folkestone’ had been placed in an institution run by Dr Barnardo, who in turn said that he had handed over the boy to ‘an American gentleman’, who had taken him to Canada. . .
CitedSecretary of State for Home Affairs v O’Brien HL 1923
The Crown has no right of appeal against the grant of a discharge of a prisoner on a writ of habeas corpus.
The Home Secrtary appealed against the issue of a writ of habeas corpus against him in respect of a prisoner held in Mountjoy prison in . .

Cited by:

CitedSecretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs v Rahmatullah SC 31-Oct-2012
The claimant complained that the UK Armed forces had taken part in his unlawful rendition from Iraq by the US government. He had been detaiined in Iraq and transferred to US Forces. The government became aware that he was to be removed to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.470682

Case Viii 27 H 6, 4 28 H 6, 1 4 H 6, 22 By All The Judges of England: 1220

In trespass the parties are at issue ; at the trial some of the jurors appear, and some make default ; a distringas with decem tales is awarded : upon this distringas a full jury appears; at this day a protection cast for the defendant shall be allowed ; for he is then demandable, and the end of a protection is to excuse his defaut. A protection does not lie, after a juror is worn.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 676, (1220-1623) Jenk 108, (1220) 145 ER 76 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.461588

2 R 3, 81 1 Cr 452 35 H 7, 16 Statutes, Process, Eviction, Certificate, Retorne De Viscount: 1220

A statute staple or merchant is once certified in Chancery, there is no occasion for a new certificate if the conusee dies ; but there is occasion if the Chancellor he named by his Christian name, and dies ; or if the first certificate was insufficient. Upon a statute staple, a capias and extent of lands, goods, and chattels are contained in one writ ; but it is not so upon a statute-merchanit. If the land be extended upon this writ, and the body be not found ; a new capias shall not be directed to the sheriff of another county, without a testatum that latitat there. The executor of the conusee must have a new certificate ; for the certificate had in the life of the conusee will not serve. A scire facias does not lie for the executor; for the statute prescribes the process, and that must be used : as Westm 2, cap. 35, gives the writ of ravishment of ward; this writ was not the words vi and armis: for this would not follow the form prescribed by the statute. Lands extended are evicted, at common law a new extent would not lie ; so if the husband died seised in right of his wife : but at this day, by the statute 37 H. 8, where there is a total eviction, a new extent may be awarded. But at common law, and at this day, such eviction does not hinder a capias for the body of the conusor. Where, after a younger statute is extended, an extendi facias upon an elder statute comes to the sheriff; the sheriff has his choice whether to return this matter, or to extend the elder statute.
By all the judges of England.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 290, (1220-1623) Jenk 163, (1220) 145 ER 105 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.461202

CASE XLVI 5 E 4, 93 Stamf 85 Ve Na Br 50: 1220

A. recovers against B. in a praecipe quod reddat, by default ; the writ of deceit in this case is judicial, and issues out of the Common Pleas, and the process is attachment and distress infinite, and is mentioned in the writ ; and in this case A. and the sheriff, and the summoners and veiors are made parties by this writ; that is, he who was sheriff and made the, return of the summons which by the writ of deceit is alledged to be false. If the present sheriff did this deceit, the writ of deceit aforesaid shall be directed to the coroners. The sheriff in this case for summoner return C. and D, de Dale, yeomen, summonitores ; the tenant shall have an averment aganst this return, that there are in Dale, yeomen, two C.’s and D.’s ; C. and D named in the sheriff’s return to be the summoners, are the elder; and other C. and D. the younger, by which the sheriff has returned the said false summons to be made : this issue, which of them was returned by the sheriff; and whether they be the sumnoners returned by the sheriff or not, shall not be tried by the country, but by the examination of the judges ; as infancy upon a writ of error to reverse a fine levied by him during his nonage ; this nonage shall be tried by inspection, and the examination of the judges, and not otherwise.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 560, (1220-1623) Jenk 122, (1220) 145 ER 86 (A)

Links:

Commonlii

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.461472

Case LXXI 29 Ass Pl 47 6 E 4, 9 7 H 4, 41 30 Ass Pl 20: 1220

Outlawry is a good plea in an audita querela, for the outlawry does not depend upon the audita querela ; and the judgment against which relief is prayed, is not to be reversed, but only the execution of it. In error, outlawry upon the judgment which is to be reversed by the writ of error, is not a plea,; for the said judgment being the foundation of the outlawry, the reversal of it reverses the outlawry: but a writ of error, to reverse any other judgment thn that upon which the outlawry depends, outlawry is a good plea. ‘Tis so of an attaint, where the attaint is to annul the verdict ; and by consequence, the judgment upon which the outlawry depends, doth not disable the plaintiff in the said attaint ; for the foundation is to be taken away, and therefore the outlawry in this case is no plea.
Judged by both benches.
If a writ of error be brought to reverse an outlawry in any action, outlawry in another action shall not disable the plaintiff in error; for otherwise, if the outlawry was erroneous, it shall never be reversed.
Exceptio rei cujus dissolutio petitur, nulla est.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 373, (1220-1623) Jenk 37, (1220) 145 ER 28 (A)

Links:

Commonlii

Torts – Other, Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.461285

Case LXXXIX 2 Keb 260, Pl 9 Jac Hob 5, Crowe’s Case: 1220

Visne, Consensus, Error.
A. brings delict against B. upon an obligation bearing date at Coventry. This suit was in the King’s Bench, removed thither out of Coventry; a procedendo was awarded to Coventry ; by agreement betweeri the parties, the procendendo was not delivered but the plaintiff prosecuted his suit in the King’s Bench, and laid the said action in London ; upon issue of non est factum pleaded, the plaintiff had a verdict, and judgment ; reversed in error, notwithstanding the said consent of plaintiff arid defendant, and although this action be transitory.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 278, (1220-1623) Jenk 310, (1220) 145 ER 226 (D)

Links:

Commonlii

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.461190

CASE LIII 10 E 4, 15 Dyer, 212, 241 Yel 51, 52 Rescous, Return Le Viscount: 1220

Upon a capias directed to the sheriff against A. the sheriff returns a rescous by J S of Dale yeoman, and mentions the year and day, but not the place where the rescous was committed ; this return is void : for it cannot be traversed for want of a place out of which the jury shall come : but upon this return the rescuer, upon his appearance, shall be commiitted ; and afterwards received to his traverse, or exception to the indictment : for a rescous is a great and heinous offence in violation and contempt of justice; and this want of a legal form shall not excuse him from imprisonment in terrorem and exemplum.
By the judges of both benches.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 50, (1220-1623) Jenk 125, (1220) 145 ER 88 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.460962

1 H 7, 20 5 Co 88 A B, Garnon’s Case Execution: 1220

A. brings trespass vi and armis against B. B. is condemned in damages in the time of one King, who demises ; upon the coronation of the new King there was a pardon of this fine ; after four years the defendant was taken by a capias pro fine: for the King : upon a petition to the King in this case he shall be discharged; and shall not be in executiori for the plaintiff, although he should pray it ; for the capias pro fine issued erroneously after a pardon ; and he cannot be in execution at the suit, and upon the prayer of the party in this case, neither after the year is ended, nor within the year ; for the reason aforesaid.
By all the judges of England.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 23, (1220-1623) Jenk 169, (1220) 145 ER 110 (D)

Links:

Commonlii

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.460935

Case LXXXVII 10 Co 130, Osborne’s Case Damages, Fanx Latin, Anglice, Count Hardr 41 Cr Jac 665: 1220

A. brings an action on the case against B. and counts that B. took from him several goods, and mentions them and inter alia fulcrum lecti, Anglice a tester of a bed with curtains of say; upon not guilty pleaded, a verdict is found for the plainitiff, and entire damages given : arid well. For Anglice will serve : especially where there is no Latin word obvious to signify it : as in this case, there is no Latin word for a tester of a bed.
But where an obvious word occurs, because that by law, viz. by the statute of 36 E, 3, all pleas ought to be irtrolled in Latin, an Anglice will riot serve ; lest the divine science of the law should be prophaned by bararisms . Thus, in trespass pro captione and abductions unius Cornetti ; Anglice, an ox, this is faulty ; for bos is an obvious word for it.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 47, (1220-1623) Jenk 270, (1220) 145 ER 194 (A)

Links:

Commonlii

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.460959

Bulwer’s Case: 1572

B. brought an action on the case in the county of N. for maliciously causing him to be outlawed in London upon process sued out of a Court at Westminster, and causing him to be imprisoned in N. upon a capias iutlagutum directed to the sheriff of that county, but issued at Westminster; and upon demurrer it was adjudged that the action was well brought in the county of N.
In all cases where the action is founded on two things done in several counties, and both are material or traversable, and the one without the other does not maintain the action, the plaintiff may bring his actiori in which county he will.

Citations:

[1572] EngR 58, (1572-1616) 7 Co Rep 1, (1572) 77 ER 411

Links:

Commonlii

Torts – Other, Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.432025

Slade’s Case: 1598

The parties had ageed for the sale of wheat and rye crops. Slade complained as to the breach, seeking to bring an action in assumpsit. The defendant denied the existence of a contract.
Held: A jury returned a special verdict, finding Defendant paid Plaintiff for the wheat and the rye and that there was no other promises made between Plaintiff and Defendant other than the bargain in question. The issue was presented to the Justices and Barons to resolve differences between the courts regarding the issue. Where the parties has agreed for a thing, provided one had carried his duties, the other could be compelled by an action in assumpsit without formal requirements for actions on the contract

Citations:

[1598] EngR 39, (1598) 4 Co Rep 92, (1598) 76 ER 1074, [1598] EngR 40, (1598) 4 Co Rep 91, (1598) 76 ER 1072

Links:

Commonlii, Commonlii

Contract, Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.427556

– And The Lord Moone: 1658

For a supersedeas for a peer of the realm. Supersedeas.
My Lord Moone had a sute commenced against him in this Court, and tbereupon he moves by his councel upon an affidavit that he was a peer of the realm, and a Lord of the Parliament, and therefore ought not to be sued, and prayes for a supersedeas to stay the proceedings. Roll lustice, Plead your privilege, for upon an affidavit we will make no rule, or else acquaint the other party that he is a peer of the realm, and it is like he will forbear to proceed thereupon. But you ought not to troubl the Court with such notions as these.

Citations:

[1658] EngR 18, (1658) Sty 118, (1658) 82 ER 576 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Litigation Practice, Constitutional

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.410809

– And Clatch: 1685

Debt on obligation of 600l. The defendant pleads that condition was to pay a less sum by a day, and that before the day he paied in satisfaction, which per Curiam is an ill plea, having not demanded oyer of the condition.
The plaintiff replied, demanding oyer that the condition was to pay a less sum by a day, and the defendant demurs without shewing that the money was paied at the day, which per Curiam is ill; and judgment must be against the plaintiff. Sed adjornatur.

Citations:

[1685] EngR 81, (1685) 3 Keb 708, (1685) 84 ER 965 (D)

Links:

Commonlii

Litigation Practice, Contract

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.396856

Elwin v Mountford: 1669

M. had recovered against E. by default in the Kings Bench, 43 Eliz. and error was assign’d, because there was not any bayl put that term, and then there was not any appearance, and that being so certified, the judgment was resettle reversed.

Citations:

[1669] EngR 190, (1669) Noy 45, (1669) 74 ER 1014 (C)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.407030

Tillmanns Butcheries Pty Ltd v Australasian Meat Industry Employees’ Union: 1979

(Federal Court of Australia) Deane J interpreted a statute using the word ‘substantial’ saying that it ‘is not only susceptible of ambiguity: it is a word calculated to conceal a lack of precision.’

Judges:

Deane J

Citations:

(1979) 42 FLR 331

Cited by:

CitedAgbaje v Akinnoye-Agbaje SC 10-Mar-2010
The parties had divorced in Nigeria, but the former wife now sought relief in the UK under section 10 of the 194 Act. The wife said that she lived here, but the order made in Nigeria was severely detrimental requiring her either to live here in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.406669

Worlich v Massy and Co: 1791

If a person become surety for the appearance of the plaintiff in Chancery, ‘ad dandum juri in hoc parte, and that he shall prosecute with effect,’ it imports that the surety shall ‘pay the condemnation, if the plaiiitiff does not pay it, nor prosecute with effect.’

Citations:

[1791] EngR 1251, (1791) Cro Jac 67, (1791) 79 ER 57

Links:

Commonlii

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.362766

Merricks and Another v Nott-Bower: CA 1964

The plaintiff police officers had been disciplined by transfer in 1957 as a result of a report by an officer who was subsequently discredited. After their accuser was discredited they sought a declaration that the disciplinary action taken against them had been taken contrary to natural justice.
Held: Lord Denning MR said that: ‘It is asked: what use can such declarations be at this stage, when the transfer took place six and a half years ago? What good does it do now? There can be no question of reopening the transfers . . on this point we have been referred to a number of cases which show how greatly the power to grant a declaration has been widened in recent years. If a real question is involved, which is not merely theoretical, and on which the court’s gives practical guidance, then the court in its discretion can grant a declaration.’ and ‘Such being the case made, I am not prepared to say that it is unarguable. It is a well-known principle of our law that any powers conferred by statute or regulation on an executive or administrative authority must be exercised in good faith for the purpose for which they are granted. They must not be misused or abused by being applied to an ulterior purpose. Whether that principle applies here or not, I do not say; all I do say is that, if the plaintiffs allege, as they did that this was a misuse of the power of transfer that it was used, not for the purpose of good administration and efficiency but for the motive of punishment they have an arguable case which they are entitled to have tried by the courts.’

Judges:

Lord Denning MR

Citations:

[1964] 1 All ER 717, [1965] 1 QB 57, [1965] 2 WLR 702

Cited by:

CitedWilliams v Home Office (No 2) 2-Jan-1981
The plaintiff prisoner had been transferred from ordinary prison to a special control unit which had been established at the prison as a means of containing and controlling prisoners who were considered to be troublemakers and inducing them to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Administrative

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.374246

Gilmore v Whitmarsh: 1860

Where a document was proved to have been m the actual possession of a party to the action, or to be now in the possession of his attorney in another action :- Held, that secondary evidence was admissible, notice ham been given to that attorney to produce it ; and, semble, that it would have been so even without such notice to the attorney

Citations:

[1860] EngR 80 (A), (1860) 2 F and F 295

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.284919

Finlan v Winfield: ChD 2007

Blackburne J said that when considering an application to amend particulars of claim outside the limitation period: ‘the court should not confine itself to a comparison of the new cause of action with the existing cause of action at the highest level of abstraction – ie, at those facts, and no more, which the claimant must prove to entitle himself to relief – but rather at the whole range of facts which are likely to be adduced at the trial even though many of them may not be essential to the establishment of the claimant’s cause of action’

Judges:

Blackburne J

Citations:

[2007] EWHC 914 (Ch)

Cited by:

CitedParker and Another v SJ Berwin and Co and Another QBD 17-Dec-2008
The claimants sought damages from their former solicitors. They set out to purchase a football club, expending substantial sums for the purpose, relying on the defendants’ promised provision of service in finding and arranging the funding. They said . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.278873

Practice Statement (House of Lords: Appearance of counsel) in the House of Lords: HL 22 May 2008

The House reminded counsel that if they were instructed to appear in a case before the highest court of the land, they were expected to appear in person. The House valued and relied upon counsel to assist, and attendance was both expected and required. Where circumstances justified a non-attendance, counsel should write to the appropriate law lord to seek leave of absence.

Judges:

Lord Bingham of Cornhill, Lord Hope of Craighead, Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers, Lord Carswell and Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood

Citations:

Times 03-Jun-2008

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Litigation Practice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.277555

Ashmore and Others v Corporation of Lloyds: HL 13 May 1992

A Judge’s interlocutory order for the trial of a preliminary point could be set aside only if it was clearly wrong: ‘In my opinion, when a judge alive to the possible consequences decides that a particular course should be followed in the conduct of the trial in the interests of justice, his decision should be respected by the parties and upheld by an appellate court unless there are very good grounds for thinking that the judge was plainly wrong.’ and ‘Litigants are not entitled to the uncontrolled use of a trial Judge’s time. Other litigants await their turn. Litigants are only entitled to so much of the trial Judge’s time as is necessary for the proper determination of the relevant issues.’
There is an overriding duty on lawyers to assist in the prompt and economical disposal of litigation.
Lord Templeman referred to previous case where he had ‘warned against proceedings in which all or some of the litigants indulge in over-elaboration causing difficulties to judges at all levels in the achievement of a just result. He also said that the appellate court should be reluctant to entertain complaints about a judge who controls the conduct of proceedings and limits the time and scope of evidence and argument. So too, where a judge, for reasons which are not plainly wrong, makes an interlocutory decision or makes a decision in the course of a trial the decision should be respected by the parties and if not respected should be upheld by an appellate court unless the judge was plainly wrong . . An expectation that the trial would proceed to a conclusion upon the evidence [that the party wishing to call are sought] to be adduced is not a legitimate expectation. The only legitimate expectation of any plaintiff to receive justice. Justice can only be achieved by assisting the judge and accepting his rulings.’

Judges:

Lord Templeman, Lord Roskill

Citations:

Gazette 13-May-1992, [1992] 2 All ER 486, [1992] 1 WLR 446, [1992] 2 Lloyds Rep 1

Cited by:

CitedNoorani v Merseyside TEC Limited CA 19-Oct-1998
The claimant had claimed race discrimination. The tribunal declined to order the issue of witness summonses. The EAT overturned that decision on the basis that the tribunal had not recognised that it had a discretion to issue the summonses, and had . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Legal Professions

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.77897

Ashe v Mumford and Others: ChD 7 Mar 2000

The Regulation under question was procedural;, and a failure to comply with its requirements was not to be deemed fatal. The requirement for a trustee to identify the transactions to be set aside did not require every single part of the scheme to be detailed, provided as in this case the purpose of the scheme was clearly to defeat creditors and the trustee in bankruptcy. The mother of a bankrupt purchased her council house with a fifty per cent discount, and was funded as to the rest by the bankrupt’s wife.

Citations:

Times 07-Mar-2000, Gazette 09-Nov-2000

Statutes:

Insolvency Rules 1986 (1986 No 1925) 7.3

Cited by:

Appeal fromAshe v Mumford CA 2001
The court considered the relative interests arising in the trust of a house bought under the right to buy scheme.
Held: The court upheld the trial judge’s decision that the discount should not be apportioned between the parties, the series of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Insolvency

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.77892

Arab Monetary Fund v Hashim and Others (No 8): ChD 17 Jun 1993

Leave to amend was given to the defendant to add a claim for a contribution. It was not an issue of fact. The statute did not imply any assumption that the defendant would would not maintain a defence. Matters of foreign law were not part of the facts of a case.

Judges:

Chadwick J

Citations:

Times 17-Jun-1993, [1993] CLY 3134

Statutes:

Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978 1, Supreme Court Act 1981 69(5), Rules of the Supreme Court Ord 18 r 7(1)

Damages, Litigation Practice

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.77849

Arab Monetary Fund v Hashim and Others (Number 9): ChD 29 Jul 1994

There were two foreign defendants who were each liable to the plaintiff.
Held: The English court had jurisdiction to allocate the damages between them. Execution should not be stayed because the plaintiff should be allowed to retain the opportunity to commence that part of the proceedings, ie execution, in such jurisdiction as he thought fit.

Judges:

Chadwick J

Citations:

Times 11-Oct-1994, [1994] CLY 3555

Statutes:

Civil Liability (Contributions) Act 1978, Civil Evidence Act 1968 2 4 6

Cited by:

CitedIS Innovative Software Ltd v Howes CA 19-Feb-2004
It was alleged that the defendant had backdated contracts of employment to a time when he had been employed by the claimant, and had induced staff to leave. The company appealed dismissal of its claim.
Held: The advantage of the court . .
CitedKuwait Oil Tanker Company Sak; Sitka Shipping Incorporated v Al Bader;Qabazard; Stafford and H Clarkson and Company Limited; Mccoy; Kuwait Petroleum Corporation and Others CA 28-May-1999
The defendants having been found to have acted dishonestly to the tune of pounds 130,000,000 sought a stay of execution pending an appeal. The judge had found that the appeal was arguable. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Evidence, Limitation

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.77850

All-In-One Design and Build Ltd v Motcomb Estates Ltd and Another: QBD 4 Apr 2000

The new civil procedure rules could impose sanctions or penalties on parties who failed to act in accordance with the spirit of the rules. The word ‘interest’ when allowing a judge to award interest by way of a penalty for the failure to accept a reasonable offer was not the same as the interest awarded on a judgement.

Citations:

Times 04-Apr-2000

Statutes:

Civil Procedure Rules 36.21

Litigation Practice

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.77762

Annodeus Ltd and Others v Gibson and Others: ChD 2 Mar 2000

The court listed relevant issues for any strike out application on the grounds of want of prosecution, including the length of delay, the degree of compliance with court rules and orders, any prejudice to the defendant, and any effect on the trial and other parties, any contribution by the defendant to the delay, the respective conduct of the claimant and defendant, and any other relevant factors

Judges:

Neuberger J

Citations:

Times 03-Mar-2000

Cited by:

QuestionedLa Baguette Ltd and Others v Audergon CA 23-Jan-2002
Judges should be careful not to create judicial checklists which added a gloss to the civil procedure rules. The claimant’s action had been stayed automatically for not having progressed for a year. The judge applied the checklist in Annodeus to . .
CitedMinistry of Defence v Foxley and others Admn 10-Dec-2007
In 1992, the claimant and members of his family were made subject to restraint orders after his conviction for corruption. They now applied for discharge of the orders claiming excessive delay. Nothing had moved forward since 1996, saying hey had in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.77803

Allergan Inc and Another v Sauflon Pharmaceuticals Ltd: PatC 24 Feb 2000

A claimant in patent infringement proceedings sought leave to join in the defendant’s Spanish supplier as a joint tortfeasor. The application was refused because before exposing a foreign party to the expense of defending such proceedings there had to be shown an arguable case. Here what was shown was compatible with proper acts of a supplier supporting his customer with information as to the product being sold, the market and providing information which might assist the defendant to defend.

Citations:

Gazette 24-Feb-2000, Times 15-Mar-2000, [2000] EWHC Patents 168

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Litigation Practice, Intellectual Property

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.77747

The Popi M; Rhesa Shipping Co SA v Edmonds: 1983

The parties disputed the cause of the loss of a ship. The experts suggested different but improbably explanations; each supported as the most likely explanation only because any other hypothesis was regarded as almost (if not altogether) impossible. The owners of the ship claimed against underwriters for her total loss which had occurred in calm weather. It became common ground that the vessel had sunk because of an ingress of sea water through a hole in the side plating. Underwriters contended that the vessel had been unseaworthy and that had been the proximate cause of the entry of water. The court made no finding that the vessel was seaworthy or that she was unseaworthy; he was left in doubt. The owners put forward a case that the hole in the side plating had been caused by contact with a submerged and moving submarine by eliminating other possibilities; the judge concluded that contact with a moving submarine was so improbable that if he were to conclude that it was the likely cause of the loss he had to be satisfied that any other explanation for the casualty had to be ruled out. The underwriters put forward a case that the hole had arisen through wear and tear and provided a detailed explanation as to how that had happened. The judge rejected that detailed explanation and was therefore left with a choice between the owner’s submarine hypothesis and the possibility that the casualty occurred as a result of wear and tear but by means of a mechanism which remained in doubt.
Held: Bingham J referred to the dictum of Sherlock Holmes: ‘How often have I said to you that, when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth?’ He concluded that, despite the inherent improbability and despite the disbelief with which he had been inclined to regard it, the collision with the submarine had to be accepted on the balance of the probabilities as the explanation of the casualty.

Judges:

Bingham J

Citations:

[1983] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 235

Cited by:

At First InstanceRhesa Shipping Co SA v Edmonds (The Popi M) HL 16-May-1985
The Popi M sank in calm seas and fair weather as a result of a large and sudden entry of water into her engine room through her shell plating. The vessel’s owners claimed against her hull and machinery underwriters, contending that the loss was . .
CitedIde v ATB Sales Ltd and Another CA 28-Apr-2008
Each appellant challenged how the judge had decided between alternative proofs of causation of the respective loss. In Ide, the claimant asserted a fault in a cycle handlebar, and in Lexus, the claimant asserted that it caught fire whilst . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Damages, Litigation Practice

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.267224

Re Evans: 1986

Citations:

[1986] 1 WLR 101

Cited by:

Cited3 Individual Present Professional Trustees of 2 Trusts v an Infant Prospective Beneficiary of One Trust and others ChD 25-Jul-2007
The parties challenged under the 198 Act the right of trustees to seek a Beddoe order protecting themselves against an award of costs. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.259675

Phosphate Sewage Co Ltd v Molleson: 1879

For an action making a collateral attack on a previous decision not to be an abuse of process the evidence had to be ‘fresh’ i.e. unavailable at the time of the first hearing, and the ‘new evidence must be such as entirely changes the aspect of the case’

Judges:

Earl Cairns LC

Citations:

(1879) 4 App Cas 801

Cited by:

CitedSimms v Conlon and Another CA 20-Dec-2006
Solicitors within a practice sued each other, and one wished to plead the fact of a finding of professional misconduct.
Held: The defendant’s appeal succeeded. It was not an abuse for the appellant to continue to assert his innocence, and the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.248045

C H Giles and Co v Morris: 1972

Megarry J considered why a court should be reluctant to create an obligation to continue a business where a court might be asked to judge compliance:: ‘difficulties of constant superintendence’ were a ‘narrow consideration’ because ‘there is normally no question of the court having to send its officers to supervise the performance of the order . . . . Performance . . . is normally secured by the realisation of the person enjoined that he is liable to be punished for contempt if evidence of his disobedience to the order is put before the court; . . .’

Judges:

Megarry J

Citations:

[1972] 1 WLR 307

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedCo-Operative Insurance Society Ltd v Argyll Stores HL 21-May-1997
The tenants of a unit on a large shopping centre found the business losing money, and closed it in contravention of a ‘keep open’ clause in the lease. They now appealed from a mandatory injunction requiring them to keep the store open.
Held: . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.247892

Thompson Newspapers Ltd v Director of Investigation and Research: 1990

(Supreme Court of Canada) The court considered a claim to exercise the privilege against self-incrimination.
Held: Whereas a compelled statement is evidence that would not have existed independently of the exercise of the powers of compulsion, evidence which exists independently of the compelled statements could have been found by other means and its quality does not depend on its past connection with the compelled statement. Accordingly evidence of the latter type is in no sense ‘testimonial’ and PSI ought not to attach to it.
Justice La Forest: ‘there is an important difference between the type of prejudice that will be suffered in the two cases. It is only when the testimony itself has to be relied on that the accused can be said to have been forced to actually create self-incriminatory evidence in his or her own trial. The compelled testimony is evidence that simply would not have existed independently of the exercise of the power to compel it; it is in this sense evidence which could have been obtained only from the accused.
By contrast, evidence derived from compelled testimony is, by definition, evidence that existed independently of the compelled testimony. This follows logically from the fact that it was evidence which was found, identified or understood as a result of the ‘clues’ provided by the compelled testimony. Although such evidence may have gone undetected or unappreciated in the absence of the compelled clues, going undetected or unappreciated is not the same thing as non-existence. The mere fact that the derivative evidence existed independently of the compelled testimony means that it could have been found by some other means, however low the probability of such discovery may have been . . . the difference between evidence which the accused has been forced to create (the compelled testimony), and the independently existing evidence he or she has been forced to assist in locating, identifying or explaining (evidence derived from compelled testimony), will be readily discernible. I believe its significance will be equally apparent.
The fact that derivative evidence exists independently of the compelled testimony means, as I have explained, that it could also have been discovered independently of any reliance on the compelled testimony. It also means that its quality as evidence does not depend on its past connection with the compelled testimony. Its relevance to the issues with which the subsequent trial is concerned, as well as the weight it is accorded by the trier of fact, are matters that can be determined independently of any consideration of its connection with the testimony of the accused.. . . What prejudice can an accused be said to suffer from being forced to confront evidence ‘derived’ from his or her compelled testimony, if that accused would have had to confront it even if the power to compel testimony had not been used against him or her? I do not think it can be said that the use of such evidence would be equivalent to forcing the accused to speak against himself or herself; once the derivative evidence is found or identified, its relevance and probative weight speak for themselves. The fact that such evidence was found through the evidence of the accused in no way strengthens the bearing that it, taken by itself, can have upon the questions before the trier of fact.’ and
‘In my view, derivative evidence that could not have been found or appreciated except as a result of the compelled testimony under the Act should in the exercise of the trial judge’s discretion be excluded since its admission would violate the principles of fundamental justice. As will be evident from what I have stated earlier, I do not think such exclusion should take place if the evidence would otherwise have been found and its relevance understood. There is nothing unfair in admitting relevant evidence of this kind …”
. . . In our judgment, the answer to the question posed by the Attorney General is ‘No’. We say that for a number of reasons. First, there is no doubt, and indeed it is not disputed before this court, that the privilege against self-incrimination is not absolute and in English law Parliament has, for a variety of reasons, in a whole range of different statutory contexts, made inroads upon that privilege.
So far as the English courts are concerned, there is, as it seems to us, no doubt that the documents to which we have referred would be regarded as admissible as a matter of law, subject of course to the trial judge’s discretion to exclude under section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984.
The question which next arises is whether, in deference to the Strasbourg jurisprudence, this court should give a different answer to that which the English courts and the will of Parliament otherwise suggest. It seems to us that the distinction made in paragraphs 68 and 69 of the European Court of Human Rights’s judgment in Saunders’s case 23 EHRR 313, between statements made and other material independent of the making of a statement, is not only one to which we should have regard, but is one which, as it seems to us, is jurisprudentially sound. We say this for the reasons advanced in the judgment of La Forest J in the Thomson Newspapers case 67 DLR (4th) 161 which, via reference to the South African constitutional court’s decision in Ferreira v Levin 1996 (1) SA 984, was before the European Court in Saunders’s case. In our judgment, there is nothing in any of the speeches in Brown v Stott [2001] 2 WLR 817 which contradicts this conclusion. The Privy Council were seeking to limit the scope of the privilege against self-incriminating statements and pre-existing documents revealed by compelled statements were outwith their consideration.’

Judges:

Justice La Forest

Citations:

(1990) 54 CCC 417

Cited by:

CitedC Plc and W v P and Secretary of State for the Home Office and the Attorney General ChD 26-May-2006
The claimant sought damages from the first defendant for breach of copyright. An ex parte search order had been executed, with the defendant asserting his privilege against self-incrimination. As computer disks were examined, potentially unlawful . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Litigation Practice

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.242453

Bumper Development Corporation Ltd v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis: CA 1991

An Indian temple having a legal persona recognised in India may assert rights and make claims under English Law. Even though it would not be recognised as a litigant if based in England and Wales, it was nonetheless entitled, in accordance with the principle of comity of nations, to sue in England.
Purchas LJ said: ‘The particular difficulty arises out of English law’s restriction of legal personality to corporations or the like, that is to say the personified groups or series of individuals. This insistence on an essentially animate content in a legal person leads to a formidable conceptual difficulty in recognising as a party entitled to sue in our courts something which on one view is little more than a pile of stones.’
Issues of foreign law are issues of fact. However, they are a special kind of fact. The Court is entitled to apply its own legal knowledge to determining the issue. However, it is confined to materials on foreign law which are exhibited to an expert report. The court considered the approach to be taken where there was conflicting evidence as to foreign law. The court must resolve differences in the same way as in the case of other conflicting evidence as to facts. It is not permissible to reject uncontradicted expert evidence unless it is patently absurd.

Judges:

Purchas LJ

Citations:

[1991] 1 WLR 1362, [1991] 4 All ER 638

Jurisdiction:

Commonwealth

Cited by:

CitedLloyd v Svenby QBD 27-Feb-2006
The two claimants sought title to a car registration plate and to a chassis number. They were to be applied to historic racing cars.
Held: The power to assign registration marks lay with the Secretary of State. Any legal rights rested not with . .
CitedRegina v D(R) Misc 16-Sep-2013
Crown Court at Blackfriars – the court was asked to what extent a witness wanting, from religious conviction, to hide her face with the niqaab form of Islamic dress should be allowed to do so, whilst giving evidence.
Held: The court considered . .
CitedXP v Compensa Towarzystwo Sa and Another QBD 13-Jul-2016
The claimant had been injured in two separate car accidents suffering physical and psychiatric injuries. Liability was admitted but the insurers coud not agree apportionment of losses. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Jurisdiction, Litigation Practice

Updated: 17 May 2022; Ref: scu.238747

Curtin v Barton: 1893

(New York) ‘When a court with competent jurisdiction is duly established, a suitor who resorts to it for the administration of justice and the protection of private rights should not be defeated or embarrassed by questions relating to the title of the judge who presides in the court, to his office.’

Citations:

(1893) 139 NY 505

Cited by:

CitedFawdry and Co (A Firm) v Murfitt CA 14-May-2002
The judge at first instance who was ticketed to sit as a judge in the Technology and Construction Court, had been asked to sit as a judge of the High Court to take this case. The appellant said she was acting outside her powers.
Held: The . .
CitedBaldock v Webster and Others CA 21-Dec-2004
The claimant alleged negligence against his solicitors in having failed to challenge an order made ultra vires by a county court judge.
Held: The common law doctrine of de facto jurisdiction validated the decision of the judge. The recorder . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

International, Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.221428

Suhner and Co AG v Transradio Ltd: 1967

The claimants complained at the defendant having registered a company under the name ‘Suhner’. The defendants gave no justification for using the word ‘Suhner’ as part of their name. They claimed that they had the right to form a company in order to try to stop the plaintiffs trading in this country under their own name.
Held: They were not, and an injunction was granted. Unless the confidential information sought to be protected by an action is properly identified, an injunction in the resulting unclear terms will have uncertain scope and be difficult to enforce: identification of what the information at issue was and whether it was confidential would have to be determined on a contempt motion. As to what information was confidential: ‘A great deal of the defendants’ evidence seems to me to be really beside the point, first of all, because the confidential nature of the document is not dependent on whether the information which it contains is available elsewhere; but, on the question of whether it contains useful information which has been compiled by the plaintiffs for a particular purpose and, if it does contain such information and if it has been compiled and handed over to the defendants for a particular purpose, then, as I understand the law, that document is confidential and the defendants are not entitled to use it for another purpose’.

Judges:

Plowman J

Citations:

[1967] RPC 329

Citing:

AppliedSaltman Engineering Co v Campbell Engineering Co Ltd CA 1948
The plaintiffs instructed the defendant to make tools for the manufacture of leather punches in accordance with drawings which the plaintiffs provided to the defendant for this purpose. The defendant used the drawings to make tools, and the tools to . .

Cited by:

CitedMarketmaker Beijing Co Ltd and others v CMC Group Plc and others QBD 8-Oct-2004
Interim injunctions had been obtained to prevent the defendants carrying out certain banking transactions.
Held: The remedy sought and the claim was extravagant and unlikely to succeed. The injunctions should be discharged. It was not at all . .
CitedEPI Environmental Technologies Inc and Another v Symphony Plastic Technologies Plc and Another ChD 21-Dec-2004
The claimant had developed an additive which would assist in making plastic bags bio-degradable. They alleged that, in breach of confidentiality agreements, the defendants had copied the product. The defendants said the confidentiality agreement was . .
CitedBritish Telecommunications Plc; Virgin Enterprises Ltd; J Sainsbury Plc; Marks and Spencer Plc and Ladbroke Group Plc v One In a Million Ltd and others CA 23-Jul-1998
Registration of a distinctive Internet domain name using registered trade marks and company names could be an infringement of a registered Trade Mark, and also passing off. It was proper to grant quia timet injunctions where necessary to stop . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Intellectual Property, Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.216389

Re Bullard and Taplin Ltd: ChD 1996

Tne question of whether there was at any time ‘pending court proceedings’ was answered by asking if there existed a court file. The section empowered a court itself to appoint another trustee in bankruptcy. Section 41 of the 1984 Act could be used by the HighCourt to take some control over proceedings for an individual voluntary arrangement in the County Court.

Judges:

Knox J

Citations:

[1996] BCC 973

Statutes:

Insolvency Act 1986 303, County Courts Act 1984 41(1)

Cited by:

CitedQuickson (South and West) Limited v Stephen Mark Katz, John Stephen Kelmanson (As Joint Liquidators of Buildlead Limited) ChD 25-Aug-2004
Various applications were made in the insolvency, including for removal of the liquidators and declarations that certain payments were a fraudulent preference on the creditors.
Held: No prejudice had been shown by any procedural irregularity. . .
CitedIn Re Sutton (Removal of Liquidator) ChD 17-Oct-1997
The insolvency practitioner held many appointments. His partnership in a large firm of accountants ended suddenly. He did not have the resources to handle the cases, and nor could acceptable arrangements be made for him to have access to the related . .
CitedIn Re A and C Supplies Limited ChD 17-Oct-1997
Applications were made for the removal of a liquidator from several appointments in corporate nd individual insolvencies. He had been a partner in a firm and that had ceased in a way which left it impossible to work with his former partners to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Insolvency

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.216396

Regina v National Insurance Commissioner, ex parte Social Services Secretary: CA 1981

The court emphasised the need for consistency in relation to decisions of a social service commissioner.

Judges:

Denning LJ

Citations:

[1981] 1 WLR 1017

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedIndependent Assessor v O’Brien, Hickey, Hickey CA 29-Jul-2004
The claimants had been imprisoned for many years before their convictions were quashed. They claimed compensation under the Act. The assessor said that there should be deducted from the award the living expenses they would have incurred if they had . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.199756

Chainrai v Boston: 11 Jul 2002

Judges:

Henriques J

Citations:

Unreported, 11 July 2002

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

DsitinguishedFlynn v Scougall CA 13-Jul-2004
The defendant had made a payment into court. She then applied to reduce the amount paid in, but the claimant accepted the original sum before that application was heard. The defendant appealed saying that their application operated as a stay.
DoubtedFlynn v Scougall CA 13-Jul-2004
The defendant had made a payment into court. She then applied to reduce the amount paid in, but the claimant accepted the original sum before that application was heard. The defendant appealed saying that their application operated as a stay.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.199956

Shearson Lehman Hutton v Maclaine Watson (No 2): 1990

When a court orders repayment of a sum, with interest the rate of interest may be the commercial rate, which would normally be 1% above base rate, but is variable on appropriate evidence.

Citations:

[1990] 3 All ER 723

Citing:

See AlsoShearson Lehman Hutton Inc and Another v Maclaine Watson and Co Ltd and Others 1989
The court considered the requirements of natural justice in the light of the decision in Gaiman: ‘Nor do I consider my conclusions to be inconsistent with the decision of Megarry J in [Gaiman] because Megarry J held that the principles of natural . .

Cited by:

CitedReed Executive Plc, Reed Solutions Plc v Reed Business Information Ltd, Reed Elsevier (Uk) Ltd, Totaljobs.Com Ltd CA 14-Jul-2004
Walker v Wilshire still Good Law
After successfully appealing, the defendant claimant argued for a substantial part of its costs, saying that the defendant had unreasonably refused ADR. To pursue this, it now sought disclosure of the details of the without prejudice negotiations . .
CitedAdcock v Co-Operative Insurance Society Ltd CA 26-Apr-2000
The claimant claimed under his fire insurance with the defendants. He sought damages for their delay in processing the claim.
Held: The power to award interest on damages is discretionary. The judge had refused to allow interest, at a rate . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Damages

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.199275

SS Hontestroom v SS Sagaporack: HL 1927

The court discussed the weight to be given by an appellate court to findings of fact made by the court of first instance.
Held: Not to have seen the witnesses puts appellate judges in a permanent position of disadvantage as against the trial judge, and, unless it can be shown that he has failed to use or has palpably misused his advantage, the higher Court ought not to reverse conclusions so arrived at, merely on the result of their own comparisons and criticisms of the witnesses and of their own view of the probabilities of the case. The course of the trial and the whole substance of the judgment must be looked at, and the matter does not depend on the question whether a witness has been cross-examined to credit or has been pronounced by the judge in terms to be unworthy of it. If his estimate of the man forms any substantial part of his reasons for his judgment the trial judge’s conclusions of fact should be let alone.
Viscount Sumner said: ‘What then is the real effect on the hearing in a Court of Appeal of the fact that the trial judge saw and heard the witnesses? I think it has been somewhat lost sight of. Of course, there is jurisdiction to retry the case on the shorthand note, including in such retrial the appreciation of the relative values of the witnesses, for the appeal is made a rehearing by rules which have the force of statute: Order LXVIII, r. 1. It is not, however, a mere matter of discretion to remember and take account of this fact; it is a matter of justice and of judicial obligation. None the less not to have seen the witnesses puts appellate Judges in a permanent position of disadvantage as against the trial Judge and unless it can be shown that he has failed to use or has palpably misused his advantage, the higher Court ought not to take the responsibility of reversing conclusions so arrived at merely on the results of their own comparisons and criticisms of the witnesses and of their own view of the probabilities of the case.’
. . and ‘If his estimate of the man forms any substantial part of his reasons for his judgment the trial judge’s conclusions of fact should . . be let alone.’

Judges:

Lord Sumner

Citations:

[1927] AC 37, [1927] All ER 831, 136 LT 33

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedBland v Ross (Ship Julia) (Admiralty) PC 1860
The court considered the care needed in an appellate court in reversing a decision on the facts. Lord Kingsdown said that: ‘They, who require this Board, under such circumstances to reverse a decision of the court below upon a point of this . .

Cited by:

CitedMerer v Fisher and Another CA 13-May-2003
A right of pre-emption had misdescribed the property when it was registered. The land was transferred without regard to the right of pre-emption. It was found as a fact that no money passed for the transfer, and the claimants said the unregistered . .
CitedThe Ikarian Reefer CA 1995
The court reversed the decision of the trial judge that the plaintiff insured shipowners had not deliberately scuttled their vessel or cast her away: ‘(1) The burden of showing that the trial Judge was wrong lies on the appellant . . (2) When . .
CitedAssicurazioni Generali Spa v Arab Insurance Group (BSC) CA 13-Nov-2002
Rehearing/Review – Little Difference on Appeal
The appellant asked the Court to reverse a decision on the facts reached in the lower court.
Held: The appeal failed (Majority decision). The court’s approach should be the same whether the case was dealt with as a rehearing or as a review. . .
CitedHarracksingh v The Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago and PC Neville Adams PC 15-Jan-2004
(Trinidad and Tobago) The appellant had succeeded in a claim for damages against the police for false imprisonment and assault. He now appealed a reversal of that decision. The judge had been doubtful as to the value of the police evidence. The . .
CitedAkerhielm v De Mare PC 1959
A company prospectus contained the following: ‘About a third of the capital has already been subscribed in Denmark.’ Though the directors believed this to be true, it was not true at the time the prospectus was issued.
Held: The statement was . .
CitedWhitehouse v Jordan HL 17-Dec-1980
The plaintiff sued for brain damage suffered at birth by use of forceps at the alleged professional negligence of his doctor. The Court of Appeal had reversed the judge’s finding in his favour.
Held: In this case most of the evidence at issue . .
CitedThe Queen v Crawford PC 11-Nov-2015
From the Court of Appeal of the Cayman Islands – The crown appealed against the quashing of the respondent’s conviction for possession of an unlicensed firearm. A gun was found where he had been seen to discard a gun whilst being chased. The . .
ApprovedPowell v Streatham Manor Nursing Home HL 1935
Where the Judge at the trial has come to a conclusion upon the question which of the witnesses, whom he has seen and heard, are trustworthy and which are not, he is normally in a better position to judge of this matter than the appellate tribunal . .
CitedBenmax v Austin Motor Co Ltd HL 1955
Except for cases which are expressly limited to questions of law, an appellant is entitled to appeal from the Court of Session to the House against any finding, whether it be a finding of law, a finding of fact or a finding involving both law and . .
ApprovedWhitehouse v Jordan HL 17-Dec-1980
The plaintiff sued for brain damage suffered at birth by use of forceps at the alleged professional negligence of his doctor. The Court of Appeal had reversed the judge’s finding in his favour.
Held: In this case most of the evidence at issue . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.187257

Akerhielm v De Mare: PC 1959

A company prospectus contained the following: ‘About a third of the capital has already been subscribed in Denmark.’ Though the directors believed this to be true, it was not true at the time the prospectus was issued.
Held: The statement was not fraudulent having been made with an honest belief in its truth. When a party has been acquitted of fraud the decision in his favour should not be displaced except on the clearest grounds.
Lord Jenkins said: ‘their Lordships are satisfied that this is not one of those exceptional cases in which an appellate court is justified in reversing the decision of a judge at first instance when the decision under review is founded upon the judge’s opinion of the credibility of a witness formed after seeing and hearing him give his evidence. Their Lordships can hardly imagine a case in which the credibility of a witness could be more vital than a case like the present where the claim is based on deceit, and the witness in question is one of the defendants charged with deceit. Their Lordships would add that they accept, and would apply in the present case, the principle that where a defendant has been acquitted of fraud in a court of first instance the decision in his favour should not be displaced on appeal except on the clearest grounds.’ and ‘The question is not whether the defendant in any given case honestly believed the representation to be true in the sense assigned to it by the court on an objective consideration of its truth or falsity, but whether he honestly believed the representation to be true in the sense in which he understood it albeit erroneously when it was made.’

Judges:

Lord Jenkins

Citations:

[1959] AC 789, [1959] 3 All ER 485

Jurisdiction:

Commonwealth

Citing:

CitedGlasier v Rolb 1889
A finding by a judge that a party is innocent of fraud should only reluctantly be disturbed. . .
CitedSS Hontestroom v SS Sagaporack HL 1927
The court discussed the weight to be given by an appellate court to findings of fact made by the court of first instance.
Held: Not to have seen the witnesses puts appellate judges in a permanent position of disadvantage as against the trial . .
CitedWatt (or Thomas) v Thomas HL 1947
When Scots Appellate Court may set decision aside
The House considered when it was appropriate for an appellate court in Scotland to set aside the judgment at first instance.
Lord Thankerton said: ‘(1) Where a question of fact has been tried by a judge without a jury, and there is no question . .
CitedYuill v Yuill CA 1944
Appellate Court’s Caution in Reassessing Facts
The Court of Appeal was invited to reverse the decision of the judge at first instance to accept the evidence of the petitioner (no evidence having been called by the respondent).
Held: The court considered the caution needed when overturning . .
CitedBenmax v Austin Motor Co Ltd HL 1955
Except for cases which are expressly limited to questions of law, an appellant is entitled to appeal from the Court of Session to the House against any finding, whether it be a finding of law, a finding of fact or a finding involving both law and . .

Cited by:

CitedAssicurazioni Generali Spa v Arab Insurance Group (BSC) CA 13-Nov-2002
Rehearing/Review – Little Difference on Appeal
The appellant asked the Court to reverse a decision on the facts reached in the lower court.
Held: The appeal failed (Majority decision). The court’s approach should be the same whether the case was dealt with as a rehearing or as a review. . .
CitedThe Ikarian Reefer CA 1995
The court reversed the decision of the trial judge that the plaintiff insured shipowners had not deliberately scuttled their vessel or cast her away: ‘(1) The burden of showing that the trial Judge was wrong lies on the appellant . . (2) When . .
AppliedRyan and Another v Strickland Jarvis PC 29-Jun-2005
(Antigua and Barbuda) The parties disputed the effect of a joint venture of the sale of an additional range of cars through a car showroom. One party said the other had misrepresented thir contractual status, and the other said that an approach had . .
CitedYaqoob and Another v Royal Insurance (Uk) Ltd CA 25-May-2006
Appeal against refusal of insurance company to pay on fire loss claim. Building entered by intruders with key.
Held: ‘If after hearing the evidence the judge had been left in the position that he could not be satisfied, on the balance of . .
CitedCrystal Palace FC (2000) Ltd v Dowie QBD 14-Jun-2007
The parties had agreed a compromise on the leaving of the defendant as manager. The club now said that the agreement had been obtained by fraudulent misrepresentation. He had been released but had said he had not had contact with another London club . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Torts – Other, Company

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.187260

Regina v Bloomsbury and Marylebone County Court ex parte Villerwest Limited: 1976

Lord Denning said that every Court has inherent power to control its own procedure, even though there is nothing in the rules about it, and ‘Suppose a man is on his way to the court in time with the money in his pocket. Then he is run down in an accident, or he is robbed of it. Or suppose that his cheque has been held up in the bank for a short time. Has the court no power to enlarge the time in such a case?’ . . ‘The Rules of the Supreme Court as to time have to be observed, and if substantial delay occurs without any explanation being offered, the court is entitled, in the exercise of its discretion, to refuse the extension of time . . Nevertheless, quite apart from the powers under the Rule, there is a very wide inherent jurisdiction, both in the High Court and in the County Court, to enlarge any time which the court or judge has ordered’

Judges:

Lord Denning MR

Citations:

[1976] 1 WLR 362, [1976] 1 All ER 897

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedJephson Homes Housing Association v Moisejevs and Another CA 1-Nov-2000
A possession warrant, properly issued and executed in ignorance of a payment into court by the tenant was not an abuse of process. The tenant had paid funds into court in the mistaken belief that this would be effective to set aside the warrant. She . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.187051

Palamisto General Enterprises SA v Ocean Marine Insurance Limited: CA 1972

‘Where a party asserts his opponent’s complicity in . . criminal misconduct, the case is pre-eminently one in which not only the RSC (Ord. 18 r.12(1) and Ord. 72 r. 7(2)) but also fair treatment require that, so far as practicable, the matter shall be pleaded with particularity so that the party accused may know what case he has to meet. But even if the allegations in the present statement of claim fall short of asserting criminal misconduct, they undoubtedly impute conduct of a gravely improper character which call for no less clear particularisation .’

Judges:

Buckley LJ

Citations:

[1972] 2 WLR 1425

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

AppliedJohn Zink and Co Limited v Wilkinson CA 1973
Where a party alleged breach of confidence, the pleadings should be sufficiently particular to allow a defendant to know the particular allegations he faced. . .
CitedThe Secretary of State for Trade and Industry v Swan and Othes ChD 22-Jul-2003
When commencing proceedings under the Act, the papers were defective. The secretary of state had failed to give appropriate notice, and thus prevented him from making representations as to the allegations. The allegations involved the manipulation . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.185773

Moore v News of the World: CA 1972

An article was published which the plaintiff said left readers with the false apprehension that she had written it. She claimed under the statutory tort of false attribution.
Held: The judge was correct to direct the jury to make up their minds what the impression was to the reader. Confirming that a judge need not deal in detail with facts which were admitted by both parties when directing the jury in a defamation trial, ‘There were left out of the summing up, as out of every summing up which deserves the name, some of the things which one party, and probably both parties, would have liked put in; but there was no omission which could have led to a misunderstanding or injustice.’
Lord Denning MR set out section 5 of the 1952 Act and said: ‘That is a very complicated section, but it means that a Defendant is not to fail simply because he cannot prove every single thing in the libel to be true. If he proves the greater part of it to be true, theneven though there is a smaller part not proved, nevertheless the Defendant will win as long as the part not proved does not do the Plaintiff much more harm.’

Judges:

Stephenson LJ, Lord Denning MR

Citations:

[1972] 1 QB 441

Statutes:

Copyright Act 1956 843, Defamation Act 1952 5

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBasham v Gregory and Little Brown and Co CA 2-Jul-1998
The defendant sought a retrial of his action for defamation.
Held: The judge’s directions on meaning as to the respective contentions was correct, and also the allocation of the burden of proof. Whilst the court had reservations about the . .
CitedAlan Kenneth McKenzie Clark v Associated Newspapers Ltd PatC 21-Jan-1998
The claimant was a member of Parliament and an author. The defendant published a column which was said to give the impression that the claimant had written it. It was a parody. The claim was in passing off.
Held: The first issue was whether a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Torts – Other

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.185253

Arbrath v North Eastern Railway Co: 1886

The burden of proof of a matter can shift during the course of a trial.

Citations:

(1886) 11 App Cas 247

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedGibbs and others v Rea PC 29-Jan-1998
(Cayman Islands) The respondent worked for a bank. He disclosed a business interest, but that interest grew in importance to the point where he resigned in circumstances amounting to constructive dismissal. His home and business officers were raided . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.184694

Harper v Inspector of Rutherglen: 1903

Lord Trayner said: ‘Every judgment of an inferior Court is subject to review, unless such review is excluded expressly or by necessary implication’.

Judges:

Lord Trayner

Citations:

(1903) 6 F 23

Cited by:

AdoptedArcari v Dunbartonshire County Council 1948
. .
CitedGlasgow City Council v DH and Another IHCS 17-Jul-2003
Exclusion orders had been sought under the Act, but refused for non-compliance with procedures under the Act. New applications were made to different courts, and the applicant said it was not open to the Authorities to make the same application . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Scotland, Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.184723

Marubeni Corporation v Sea Containers Ltd: ComC 17 May 1995

Procedure – set-off – contract for supply of containers – construction of contract – clear words to exclude right of set-off – equitable set-off – abatement – defective containers. The words ‘without deduction’ have been held in the context of a purely commercial contract to exclude the right of set-off. The court was concerned with a clause which incorporated the word ‘deduction’ with payment: ‘… without any deductions or withholdings whatsoever.’
Held: The words were not terms of art: ‘It is unlikely either could be described as a clear word. At the end of the day therefore, the question is one of construction in the context of the contract as a whole and it is to that I shall now turn.’ The right of set-off was excluded.

Judges:

Waller J

Citations:

Unreported, 17 May 1995

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedConnaught Restaurants Ltd v Indoor Leisure Ltd CA 17-Sep-1993
The lease provided the tenant would pay the rent ‘without any deduction’.
Held: The words ‘without any deductions’ in a lease were ambiguous and were insufficient to exclude the tenant’s right to claim a set off. Clear words are needed before . .

Cited by:

CitedEdlington Properties Limited v J H Fenner and Co Limited CA 22-Mar-2006
The landlord had assigned the reversion of the lease. There was an outstanding dispute with the tenant defendant who owed arrears of rent, but sought to set these off against a claim for damages for the landlord’s failure to construct the factory in . .
CitedBOC Group Plc v Centeon Llc and Centeon Bio-Services Inc CA 29-Apr-1999
The court was asked whether a clause in a share sale agreement setting out the payment obligation worked to preclude the purchaser from exercising a right of set-off when the time comes to pay a later instalment of the price.
Held: The appeal . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.182577

Bolton v Liverpool Corporation: HL 1833

The defendant sought to inspect the plaintiff’s instructions to his counsel, though not of the advice which counsel gave.
Held: The application was refused. Lord Brougham said: ‘It seems plain, that the course of justice must stop if such a right exists. No man will dare to consult a professional adviser with a view to his defence or to the enforcement of his rights.’

Judges:

Lord Brougham LC

Citations:

(1833) 1 My and K 88, [1833] EngR 409, (1833) 39 ER 614

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromBolton v The Corporation of Liverpool 1833
. .
See AlsoBolton v Corporation of Liverpool 1833
A party has a right to the production of such deeds only as either sustain his own title exclusively, or sustain it jointly with that of his adversary. A party is not compellable to produce, for the purposes of an action or suit, cases laid before . .

Cited by:

CitedB and Others Russell McVeagh McKenzie Bartleet and Co v Auckland District Law Society, Gary J Judd PC 19-May-2003
(New Zealand) Solicitors resisted requests to disclose papers in breach of legal professional privilege from their professional body investigating allegations of professional misconduct against them.
Held: The appeal was allowed. The . .
CitedThree Rivers District Council and others v Governor and Company of the Bank of England (No 6) HL 11-Nov-2004
The Bank anticipated criticism in an ad hoc enquiry which was called to investigate its handling of a matter involving the claimant. The claimant sought disclosure of the documents created when the solicitors advised employees of the Bank in . .
CitedPrudential Plc and Another, Regina (on the Application of) v Special Commissioner of Income Tax and Another Admn 14-Oct-2009
The company had obtained legal advice but had taken it from their accountants. The Revenue sought its disclosure, and the company said that as legal advice it was protected by legal professional privilege.
Held: The material was not protected. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.182241

Simon Engineering Plc and Another v Butte Mining and Another (No 2): ComC 27 Feb 1995

Procedure – Interlocutory injunction – anti-suit injunction – injunction to prevent appeal in the US from being pursued – foreign court pronounced itself to be without jurisdiction – natural forum – foreign proceedings oppressive

Judges:

Rix J

Citations:

[1996] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 91

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Litigation Practice, International

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.182569

Fazil-Alizadeh v Nikbin: CA 25 Feb 1993

There are powerful policy reasons for admitting in evidence as exceptions to the without prejudice rule only the very clearest of cases. Unless this highly beneficial rule is most scrupulously and jealously protected, it will all too readily become eroded. The taped without prejudice conversation might have been taken to contain an admission by the claimant of the payment of andpound;10,000 although he continued in his pleadings to deny such payment, but that did not come within the exception to the rule.
Simon-Brown LJ said that: ‘I add only this. There are in my judgment powerful policy reasons for admitting in evidence as exceptions to the without prejudice rule only the very clearest of cases. Unless this highly beneficial rule is most scrupulously and jealously protected, it will all too readily become eroded.’

Judges:

Simon Brown, Balcombe, Peter Gibson LJJ

Citations:

25 February 1993 (unreported), Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Transcript No 205 of 1993, Times 19-Mar-1993

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBerry Trade Ltd and Another v Moussavi and others CA 22-May-2003
A defendant appealed against an order admitting as evidence, records of ‘without prejudice’ conversations.
Held: Written and oral communications, which are made for the purpose of a genuine attempt to compromise a dispute between the parties, . .
CitedSavings and Investment Bank Ltd (In Liquidation) v Fincken CA 14-Nov-2003
Parties to litigation had made without prejudice disclosures. One party sought to give evidence contradicting the dsclosure, and the other now applied for leave to amend based upon the without prejudice statements to be admitted to demonstrate the . .
CitedBNP Paribas v A Mezzotero EAT 30-Mar-2004
EAT Appeal from ET’s decision, at directions hearing, permitting evidence to be adduced, at the forthcoming hearing of a direct sex discrimination and victimisation complaint, of the Applicant’s allegation that, . .
CitedBrunel University and Another v Webster and Vaseghi CA 22-May-2007
The parties had been involved in long standing disputes about the procedures in the respondents complaints of race discrimination. The claims had been dismissed, but the Vice-Chancellor then wrote publicly of unfounded unwarranted and excessive . .
CitedBrodie v Ward (T/A First Steps Nursery) EAT 7-Feb-2007
EAT Practice and Procedure – without prejudice letter
The EAT held that the Employment Tribunal was correct in excluding a solicitor’s without prejudice letter in other proceedings which the Appellant . .
CitedX v Y Ltd (Practice and Procedure – Disclosure) EAT 9-Aug-2018
Iniquity surpasses legal advice privilege
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Disclosure
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Striking-out/dismissal
An Employment Judge struck out paragraphs of the Claimant’s claim as they depended on an email in respect of which legal advice privilege was claimed. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Evidence, Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.182473

R A Lister Ltd v Thompson (Shipping) Ltd: 1987

When asking whether a liability remained to support a claim, after a compromise, a relevant liability would include a future liability imposed by the court even if that had not yet been assessed.

Citations:

[1987] 3 All ER 1032

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedAbbey National Bank plc v Matthews and Son (a Firm), David Gouldman and Co (a firm) ChD 21-Feb-2003
The claimant made claims against two defendants. It had compromised the claim against one defendant, taking an assignment of that party’s claim against the remaining defendant and continued against that second defendant.
Held: It could not be . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.180959

British Cash and Parcel Conveyors Ltd v Lamson Store Service Co Ltd: 1908

The court explained the law underlying the civil and criminal penalties for the maintenance of an action by third parties: ‘It is directed against wanton and officious intermeddling with the disputes of others in which the [maintainer] has no interest whatever, and where the assistance he renders to one or the other party is without justification or excuse.’

Judges:

Fletcher-Moulton LJ

Citations:

[1908] 1 KB 1006

Cited by:

CitedRegina (Factortame Ltd and Others) v Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions (No 8) CA 3-Jul-2002
A firm of accountants had agreed to provide their services as experts in a case on the basis that they would be paid by taking part of any damages awarded. The respondent claimed that such an agreement was champertous and unlawful.
Held: The . .
CitedGiles v Thompson, Devlin v Baslington (Conjoined Appeals) HL 1-Jun-1993
Car hire companies who pursued actions in motorists’ names to recover the costs of hiring a replacement vehicle after an accident, from negligent drivers, were not acting in a champertous and unlawful manner. Lord Mustill said: ‘there exists in . .
CitedSibthorpe and Morris v London Borough of Southwark CA 25-Jan-2011
The court was asked as to the extent to which the ancient rule against champerty prevents a solicitor agreeing to indemnify his claimant client against any liability for costs which she may incur against the defendant in the litigation in which the . .
CitedSimpson v Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital NHS Trust CA 12-Oct-2011
The court was asked whether it was possible to assign as a chose in action a cause of action in tort for damages for personal injury, and if so under what circumstances it was possible.
Held: The appeal was dismissed. The claimant did not have . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Costs, Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.181095

Grant v Southwestern and County Properties Ltd: ChD 1974

The court had to decide whether a tape recording fell within the expression ‘document’ in the Rules of the Supreme Court.
Held: The furnishing of information had been treated as one of the main functions of a document, and the tape recording was accordingly a document. Obiter, the court recognised the distinction between a verbatim tape-recording of a conversation and a summary of the note-taker’s recollection of a conversation with the other party to the litigation.
Walton J said: ‘it seems to me that the simplest and most foolproof method of ‘inspection’ in these cases is for the party giving discovery to play the tape to the party to whom discovery is being given, and for that party to make his own recording as it is played.’

Judges:

Walton J

Citations:

[1975] Ch 185, [1974] 2 All ER 465

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedDerby and Co Ltd And Others v Weldon And Others (No 9) ChD 25-Jul-1990
The court considered the application of rules relating to the discovery of documents to material held on computer: ‘the database of a computer, so far as it contained information capable of being retrieved and converted into readable form, and . .
CitedRegina v Secretary of State for Health ex parte Quintavalle (on behalf of Pro-Life Alliance) HL 13-Mar-2003
Court to seek and Apply Parliamentary Intention
The appellant challenged the practice of permitting cell nuclear replacement (CNR), saying it was either outside the scope of the Act, or was for a purpose which could not be licensed under the Act.
Held: The challenge failed. The court was to . .
CitedTrail Riders Fellowship and Another, Regina (on The Application of) v Dorset County Council and Others CA 20-May-2013
The Fellowship had applied for orders upgrading public rights of way. The council rejected the applications saying that the digital mapping software used to repare the maps submitted were not compliant with the requirements of the legislation. They . .
CitedTrail Riders Fellowship and Another, Regina (on The Application of) v Dorset County Council SC 18-Mar-2015
Objection had been made that a plan, used to register a right of way before it would disappear if un-registered, was to the wrong scale and that therefore the application was ineffetive.
Held: The Council’s appeal failed. The plan was too . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Evidence

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.180095

Powell v Kempton Park Racecourse Co Ltd: HL 1899

A statute prohibited the keeping of ‘a house, office, room or other place’ for betting. The defendant kept an uncovered enclosure for betting.
Held: His activity did not fall within the list under the ejusdem generis rule, The three specific items were all enclosed spaces, and the defendant’s was not. A preamble cannot, therefore, be used to qualify or cut down the enactment which follows

Judges:

Earl of Halsbury LC.

Citations:

[1899] AC 143

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.606352

Main v McAndrew Wormald Ltd: 1988

Citations:

1988 SLT 141

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Cited by:

CitedKennedy v Cordia (Services) Llp SC 10-Feb-2016
The appellant care worker fell in snow when visiting the respondent’s client at home. At issue was the admission and status of expert or skilled evidence.
Held: Mrs Kennedy’s appeal succeeded. ‘There are in our view four considerations which . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.606457

Reading v The London School Board: 1886

Wills J said: ‘All the common law statutes as to interpleader are now repealed and the right to that class of relief is regulated by Order LVII, by which the old practice of the Court of Chancery is modified’.

Judges:

Wills J

Citations:

(1886) 16 QBD 686

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedCelador Radio Ltd v Rancho Steak House Ltd (Equitable Interpleader – Enforcement) QBD 16-Feb-2018
Equitable Interpleader
Equitable Interpleader – Enforcement – controlled goods – interpleader – equity – common law – Civil Procedure – Rules of Supreme Court – title to goods – third party – Writ – High Court Enforcement Officers . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.605168

Gilbert v Endean: CA 1878

The plaintiff had obtained an order against a defendant for the defendant to give a bond for payment of money to the plaintiff and to deposit some shares as security for compliance. Subsequently, the plaintiff entered into a compromise with the defendant by which the plaintiff agreed to accept payment of a smaller sum. However, the plaintiff later sought to proceed under the initial order on the basis that the compromise was reached because the defendant had concealed a material fact, that is, the defendant’s father had died during the negotiations for the compromise whereas the plaintiff had been led to believe that the father was alive and would not help the defendant. In other words, the defendant was not in the penniless state that he had led the plaintiff to believe. The court at first instance allowed the plaintiff to enforce the initial order A failure to object to the reception of evidence at the time when it is tendered ordinarily amounts, of course, to a waiver of objections.
Cotton LJ said that: ‘those applications only are considered interlocutory which do not decide the rights of the parties, but are made for the purpose of keeping things in statu quo till the rights can be decided, or for the purpose of obtaining some direction of the Court as to how the cause is to be conducted, as to what is to be done in the progress of the cause for the purpose of enabling the Court ultimately to decide upon the rights of the parties.’

Judges:

Cotton LJ

Citations:

(1878) 9 Ch D 259

Cited by:

CitedHayward v Zurich Insurance Company Plc CA 31-Mar-2015
The claimant sought damages alleging his back had been injured at work. The insurers accepted liability but said that the claimant had exaggerated the extent of his injury. The claim was settled, but later a neighbour of the claimants said that the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.545143

Davy v Garrett: 1878

It is not sufficient in pleadings to allege facts from which fraud might be inferred but which are also consistent with innocence.
Thesiger LJ said: ‘Fraudulent conduct must be distinctly alleged and distinctly proved, and it [is] not allowable to leave fraud to be inferred from the facts’ and ‘General allegations, however strong may be the words in which they are stated, are insufficient to amount to an averment of fraud of which any court ought to take notice.’

Judges:

Thesiger LJ

Citations:

(1878) 7 ChD 473

Cited by:

CitedArmitage v Nurse; etc CA 19-Mar-1997
A clause in a trust deed may validly excuse trustees from personal liability for even gross negligence. The trustee was exempted from liability for loss or damage ‘unless such loss or damage shall be caused by his own actual fraud’.
Held: The . .
CitedStocker v Stocker QBD 10-Jun-2015
The claimant alleged defamation by his former wife in a post on facebook. The posting and associatedeEmails were said falsely to have accused him of serious abuse, and that the accusations had undermined his relationship with his new partner.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Torts – Other, Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.548011

Dubois v Hole and wife: 14 Jul 1708

If a bill is brought against Baron and Feme for a demand out of the seperate estate of the feme ; and the husband is beyond sea, and not amenable by the process of the Court ; yet, if the wife is served with a Subpoena, she must appear, and answer the plaintiff’s Bill.

Citations:

[1708] EngR 61, (1708) 2 Vern 613, (1708) 23 ER 1002

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.391905

John Lyde v Thomas Rodd: PC 16 Feb 1710

In an action for damages against an attorney, for filing a bill in chancery without any authority , or even with the knowledge of the plaintiff, which was afterwards dismissing with costs, and the plaintiff obliged to pay those costs; he may lay his venue either in the county where the court of Chancery is held, or in the county where he actually paid the money.]

Citations:

[1710] EngR 37, (1710) 1 Bro PC 65, (1710) 1 ER 420

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

Commonwealth

Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.391767

Jones v Randall: 7 Feb 1774

In an action upon a wager, whether a decree of the Court of Chancery would be reversed on appeal to the House of Lords, proof of the decree arid reversal is sufficient without shewing the previous proceedings below. – A copy of the judgment of reversal is admissible, and need not be stamped.

Citations:

[1774] EngR 42, (1774) 1 Cowp 17, (1774) 98 ER 944 (A)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

See AlsoJones v Randall HL 23-Apr-1774
Gaming – Declaration that there was a promissory note on a wager given to the piaintiff by defendant in case of a decree in the Court of Chancery should be reversed in the House of Lords, to which decree the person who had laid upon the reversal was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.373898

Jobserve v Skillsite: ChD 2004

Whilst the general principles of contractual construction applied to the construction of undertakings any ambiguity should be resolved in favour of the person giving the undertaking.

Judges:

Lewison J

Citations:

[2004] EWHC 661 (Ch)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMarketmaker Technology (Beijing) Co Ltd and Others v CMC Group Plc and Others QBD 24-Jun-2009
The claimants sought the committal of the fourth defendant for contempt having broken his undertaking to the court to provide details of his means.
Held: The terms of the undertaking were not ambiguous and could not be read in the way . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.347191

Spottiswoode v Clark: 11 Dec 1846

A plaintiff seeking an injunction to restrain publication of documents must first demonstrate a title in them.

Citations:

[1846] EngR 1197, (1846) 1 Coop T Cott 254, (1846) 47 ER 844

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedPrince Albert v Strange ChD 8-Feb-1849
The Prince sought to restrain publication of otherwise unpublished private etchings and lists of works by Queen Victoria. The etchings appeared to have been removed surreptitiously from or by one Brown. A personal confidence was claimed.
Held: . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Intellectual Property

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.303092

Extraktionstechnik Gesellschaft fur Anlagenbau GmbH v Oskar: CA 1984

Where there are unexplained features of both the claim and the defence which are disturbing because they bear the appearance of falsity and disreputable business dealings and questionable conduct, the Court should not make tentative assessments of the respective chances of success of the parties or the relative strengths of their good or bad faith, and should not on such an examination grant the defendant conditional leave to defend but should give unconditional leave to defend.

Citations:

(1984) 128 SJ 417, (1984) LS Gaz 1362

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedNolan v Wright ChD 26-Feb-2009
The defendant sought to re-open the question of whether the charge under which he might otherwise be liable was an extortionate credit bargain. The creditor said that that plea was time barred. The defendant argued that a finding that the agreement . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.304586

Goodall v Little: 11 Jan 1851

The answer, after denying the title of the Plaintiffs, set forth a schedule of documents in the possession of the Defendants, which it admitted related to the matters mentioned in the bill ; but it denied that, by those documents, the truth of such matters would appear to be otherwise than as stated in the answer ; and it submitted that the Defendants ought not to be ordered to produce the documents, and, in addition, that certain of the letters mentioned in the schedule ought not to be produced in this or any other suit, inasmuch as they were written either pending or in contemplation of the litigation in this suit, and with reference to the matters in this suit brought into controversy, and were written to one of the Defendants from his solicitor, or from an attorney who had been employed by him in a suit instituted by him in the Lord Mayor’s Court, to which the bill related, to the solicitors of that Defendant, or from one of the Defendants to another of them for the purpose of being communicated to the solicitor of the latter with a view to his defence in this litigation. Held, that such of the first class of letters as were written to the Defendants by their solicitors, in that character merely, were privileged, but that all the other documents and letters ought to be produced..

Citations:

[1851] EngR 102, (1850-1851) 1 Sim NS 155, (1851) 61 ER 60

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Legal Professions, Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.296418

Societe D’Informatique Service Realisation Organisation v Ampersand Software Bv: ECJ 25 Sep 1995

Court’s refusal to stay enforcement of foreign court order cannot be appealed against. Different jurisdictions not to be used to get advantage on enforcement.

Citations:

Ind Summary 09-Oct-1995, Times 25-Sep-1995

Statutes:

EC Treaty Articles 37 and 38, Brussels Convention 1968

Jurisdiction:

European

Citing:

Reference fromSociete D’Informatique Service Realisation Org v Ampersand Software Bv CA 29-Sep-1993
Foreign judgment registered here despite claim that it was obtained by fraud. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.89368

SmithKline Beecham Biologicals SA v Connaught Laboratories Inc: ChD 14 Jan 1999

Where a hearing had been aborted, documents which had not been read to, or by, the court, or referred to in open argument, remained not in the public domain but private. Confidential items referred to in skeletons but for aborted hearing retained confidence.

Citations:

Times 14-Jan-1999

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.89349

Linotype-Hell Finance Ltd v Baker: CA 25 Nov 1992

Stay of execution pending an appeal to the House of Lords was granted where the case was arguable and the defendant would be ruined if called upon to pay the full amount. Older cases on such matters are of little use.

Judges:

Otton LJ

Citations:

Gazette 25-Nov-1992, [1992] 4 All ER 887

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.83080