Johns v Johns

Case

[2007] NZCA 559

5 December 2007

No judgment structure available for this case.

JUDGMENT REISSUED ON 13/12/07 PURSUANT TO RECALL JUDGMENT

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND

CA206/07 [2007] NZCA 559

BETWEEN  STEPHEN HENRY CYRIL JOHNS Appellant

ANDL R JOHNS AND C C HOLLOWAY First Respondent

AND  L R JOHNS

Second Respondent

Hearing:         1 November 2007

Court:            William Young P, Hammond and Ronald Young JJ Counsel:           P T Finnigan for Appellant

G J Judd QC and D R I Gay for Respondents

Judgment:      5 December 2007         at 10 am

JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

A        The appeal is dismissed

BWe specify, for the purpose of s 40(5) of the Legal Services Act 2000, that the respondents would have had costs of $3,000 together with usual disbursements save for the fact that the appellant was legally aided.

REASONS OF THE COURT

(Given by Ronald Young J)

JOHNS V JOHNS AND HOLLOWAY AND ANOR CA CA206/07  5 December 2007

[1]      In  early  2000  the  appellant  issued  proceedings  against  his  father  and Mr Holloway  who  are  trustees  of  a  family  trust  of  which  the  appellant  is  a discretionary beneficiary.  They allege various breaches of the trust.  The appellant also sued his father personally alleging breach of fiduciary duties.  The case in the High Court was due to be heard in the week of 16 April 2007.  On Thursday 12 April

2007 the appellant filed an application to adjourn the trial.   The application was opposed and heard by Asher J on 16 April 2007.  It was refused.  On the following day the appellant elected not to proceed with the case, which on the application of the respondent was then dismissed.

[2]      The appellant appeals against the refusal to grant an adjournment claiming:

(a)The  Judge  failed  to  take  into  account  that  the  appellant  had  no appropriate counsel to conduct the trial through no fault of his own;

(b)The Judge failed to take into account the problems the appellant had with his grant of Legal Aid thereby preventing him from obtaining suitable counsel;

(c)      The Judge failed to adequately assess the effect of refusing to grant the adjournment;

(d)The  Judge  failed  to  take  into  account  the  appellant’s  request  for further discovery; and

(e)      The  Judge  wrongly  concluded  that  the  interests  of  justice  lay  in refusing the adjournment.

[3]      The appellant acknowledges that this is an appeal from the exercise of a discretion  carrying  with  it,  therefore,  the  well  established  appellate  burden: May v May (1982) 1 NZFLR 165 at 170 (CA).  We also proceed as if there were a right of appeal from the refusal to grant an adjournment: Bevan-Smith v Reed Publishing (NZ) Ltd (2006) 18 PRNZ 310 (CA).

[4]      We turn to consider, therefore, each of the assertions of error by the Judge.

Availability of counsel and Legal Aid problems

[5]      The appellant submits the Judge either failed to take into account or gave insufficient  weight  to  the  efforts  the  appellant  had  made  to  obtain  alternative counsel.  As to sufficiency of weight, as May makes clear, it is for the first instance Judge.   As part of his difficulty in obtaining counsel the appellant says the Judge failed to take into account the difficulties he experienced with the Legal Services Agency.  The appellant claims the Judge failed to appreciate that the respondent had also contributed to delays leading up to trial.

[6]      As to this the Judge said:

[35]      Mr  Johns  was  on  clear  notice  that  further  delays  could  not  be tolerated. New counsel should have been sought from September 2006. Particularly strenuous efforts should have been made from mid-December

2006, and the absence of briefed counsel should have led to an adjournment application at that time or early in the new year.

[36]     In summary there is no justification for this late application for an adjournment in the sense of there having been any just cause shown for the delay.   The explanation that is given shows a careless disregard for the history of the case and the obvious need for its prompt disposal.

[7]      The appellant has instructed a number of counsel over the intervening seven years  since  commencement  of  this  litigation.     The  appellant’s  most  recently instructed counsel, Ms A Duffy QC (as she then was), began acting for Mr Johns in September 2005.  At that stage a hearing date of October 2005 had been given.  The trial did not proceed then and in August 2006 the April 2007 trial date was allocated. In late December 2006 Ms Duffy formally told the appellant she could no longer act for him.   The appellant did not instruct alternative counsel between then and the April trial date.

[8]      In our view the Judge was entitled to conclude that the fault in failing to obtain counsel was the appellant’s and that there was no reason for Mr Johns’ late application for adjournment.

[9]      The appellant had previously been the subject of critical judicial comment arising from his failure to take timely steps in this litigation.  As the Judge observed, Mr Johns had expressed concern about his relationship with Ms Duffy as early as August 2006 to the Legal Services Agency.  Given his level of dissatisfaction, it is surprising that Mr Johns did not seek alternative representation much earlier than December 2006.  When Ms Duffy formally withdrew as counsel in December 2006, Mr Johns left it until late January/early February 2007 to ask Mr Molloy QC to represent him at the coming trial.   Mr Johns told the Judge that Mr Molloy was prepared to act for him but that was subject not only to Legal Services Agency approval, but also to the difficulty that Mr Molloy would not be available for an April 2007 trial.

[10]     When  Mr  Molloy agreed  to  act  for  him  Mr  Johns  neither  sought  Legal Services approval nor made an application for an adjournment based on Mr Molloy’s lack of availability.  Instead, Mr Johns said, in early February 2007 he contacted all Queen’s Counsel on the Legal Services list.  However, none were prepared to take his case.   Mr Johns, in his second affidavit, made it clear he considered his case required a Queen’s Counsel and so he limited his search to such senior counsel.

[11]     Mr Johns did not explain the delay from February, when he knew no Queen’s Counsel was available to act for him, until late March when he asked his solicitors to apply for an adjournment.  The application was filed on 12 April.

[12]     Connected to Mr Johns’ concern that he had no counsel to represent him was his complaint that Legal Services delays and failures contributed to his inability to obtain counsel to represent him.  We reject this claim.

[13]     By the setting down date of August 2006 the Legal Services Agency had granted Mr Johns’ legal aid for the trial including the instruction  of  a  forensic accountant.  Ms Duffy instructed the accountant and prepared briefs of evidence for him  and  Mr Johns,  which  were  served  on  the  defendants.    The  only  contact, therefore, that Mr Johns had with the Agency from mid to late 2006 until trial was his request that it approve a second opinion from Mr Molloy relating to the quantum of his claim.  This request was made by his solicitors to the Legal Services Agency

on 13 December 2006.  Legal Services responded on 6 February asking why it was necessary to obtain  a  second  legal  opinion  on  quantum,  asking  whether  or  not Mr Johns’ counsel was still Ms Duffy, and making the observation that a forensic accountant seemed the more appropriate person to assess quantification of loss than a lawyer’s opinion.

[14]     Mr Johns responded personally and at length on 26 February.   He told the Agency that Ms Duffy no longer acted for him and that he had his files in his possession.  There was no further correspondence between the parties (that we are aware of) from 26 February until the application for adjournment and subsequent ruling.

[15]     These facts demonstrate that Mr Johns did not ask the Agency to transfer the grant of legal aid to another lawyer.   We therefore reject the suggestion that any delay by the Legal Services Agency contributed at all to Mr Johns’ failure to obtain counsel or to his inability to run the case on 16 April.

[16]     These  facts  demonstrate  that  the  Judge  correctly  concluded  that  after December 2006 the appellant made no effort to get legal aid approval for alternative counsel, limited his efforts to find alternative counsel to Queen’s Counsel and failed to apply for an adjournment shortly after December 2006 when he knew he had representation problems.  These factors were, as the Judge said, with a background of judicial warnings that further delays by him would not be tolerated.

[17]     No error has been shown in the Judge’s approach or conclusions.

Effect of refusing the adjournment

[18]     The third point raised by the appellant is that the Judge failed to adequately assess the effect of refusing to grant an adjournment on the plaintiff.  As to this the Judge said:

[38]     The consequences of a judgment against the plaintiff will be severe in  that  I am advised,  and  this  has  not  been  contested,  that  even  if  the

Judgment were not conclusive, there would be time limitation problems that would probably preclude the filing of further proceedings.

[39]      Thus,  the  consequence  of  refusing  to  grant  the  adjournment  are likely to be that Mr Johns is not able to pursue his claim further and that the substantial investment of time and money he has put into it over the previous years will be lost, without its being heard on its merits.

[19]     Counsel submitted that given the work carried out by the appellant and his advisors in this litigation, an adjournment of four months to find alternative counsel and  complete  discovery  was  not  unreasonable  in  achieving  justice  between  the parties.

[20]     The Judge was well aware of the effect of his refusal to grant an adjournment. He had been told that the appellant could not in those circumstances proceed with the case.  The Judge, therefore, knew when he refused to grant the adjournment that it was probable the plaintiff would not proceed and the defendant would seek entry of judgment and dismissal of the claim.

[21]     We observe, however, that given all of the plaintiff’s briefs had been filed and  given  the  real  dispute  in  the  case  appeared  to  be  between  the  forensic accountants, Mr Johns could have conducted the case before the Judge when the adjournment application was refused.  It was a matter for him to elect whether to do so.  He knew the potential consequences if he chose not to do so.  No error by the Judge has been shown in his appreciation of the effects of the adjournment.

Discovery

[22]     The appellant said in his adjournment application that he needed discovery of tax returns from Inland Revenue (and so non-party discovery would be required) relating  to  the  L  R  Johns  Family  Trust.    The  defendant  had  already  obtained discovery of financial statements relating to the Trust.   They provided details of income and tax paid.  The appellant had never previously sought discovery of these tax records which could only be relevant if they identified a different position than that disclosed in the Trust’s financial statements.   There is no evidence that they would.

[23]     Mr  Johns  has  had  seven  years  in  which  to  identify  these  documents  as relevant.  Given their marginal importance it is difficult to see how they could have been so pivotal as to compel an adjournment of the trial.

Balancing of effects

[24]   The appellant submits that the Judge overemphasised the effect of an adjournment on Mr L R Johns.  Mr L R Johns has poor health and the respondents advised the appellant before the trial commencement date that he would not be well enough to give evidence. The appellant says that given Mr L R Johns was not going to be able to give evidence the effect of any adjournment on his health was “near to an irrelevant consideration”.  As to this, the Judge said:

[40]      The Judgment of Venning J and the Minute of Harrison J both refer to the state of health of Mr LR Johns. An affidavit has been filed by his wife, Mrs GP Johns, in this regard. Mr LR Johns has suffered a severe stroke and although he is in Court today, a report from the Waitemata District Health Board attached to Mrs Johns’ affidavit shows that his health and understanding are greatly impaired.   Because of his medical condition the effects of the litigation upon him are lessened, but it is clear that he is still affected by it.

[41]      Mrs Johns cares for her husband on a full-time basis from her home. She nurses him 24 hours a day seven days a week. Her existing property is too large and she wishes to sell down to something more manageable, and possibly move to a sunnier climate. She feels unable to make any significant decisions or to plan ahead while the litigation is hanging over her and her husband. The litigation is a great worry to her.

[42]     This is family litigation which is undoubtedly highly stressful and unpleasant for the parties involved. Mr and Mrs LR Johns are elderly and I accept entirely that an adjournment would cause them great further distress and anxiety. The delay in obtaining a further hearing will need to be, on the plaintiff’s own account, four to six months and it may be longer before a fixture can be made available.

[25]     The Judge was entitled to take into account as part of the balance to be struck the effect of a further adjournment on the lives and health of the respondent and his family.   As counsel for the respondent pointed out, if the proceedings had been adjourned in April 2007, a further fixture would have been unlikely until early 2008. We see no error in the Judge’s approach.

Conclusion

[26]     We are satisfied the Judge took into account all relevant factors, did not take into account any irrelevant factors, and it cannot be said his decision to refuse the adjournment was plainly wrong.  It was a decision well open to the Judge given the facts of this case.

[27]     The appeal will therefore be dismissed.

[28]     The appellant is legally aided.   We make an order specifying the sum of

$3,000  plus  disbursements  was  the  order  for  costs  that  would  have  been  made against the appellant in favour of the respondent save for the fact that the appellant was legally aided (s 40(5) Legal Services Act 2000).

Solicitors:

Rennie Cox, Auckland for Appellant

Anthony Thomas, Auckland for Respondents

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