THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE SLADE DBE
Outline Relevant Facts
"However, the Claimant asserts that the e-mail contains advice on how to commit unlawful victimisation by seeking to use (and ultimately using) the redundancy/restructuring programme as a cloak to dismiss the Claimant. As such, the Claimant submits it is not protected because it falls foul of what is called the iniquity principle. The Respondent's position is that even if this interpretation of the e-mail is true, which it denies, it does not fall within the ambit of iniquity and is therefore is [sic] privileged."
The Decision of the EJ on the two questions subject to appeal
Question 1: The meaning of the email of 29 April 2016
"� At its highest, the e-mail discloses advice on how to handle a possible redundancy of the Claimant as part of a UK wide process by which it would be reducing the number of lawyers it employed and acknowledges the risk that the Claimant might take legal action but points to the wider context as in effect justification. � It is legal advice aimed and [sic] avoiding rather than evading possible legal action (Bullivant) in place of simply doing nothing in fear that the Claimant might take further legal action. This is what lawyers do day in day out and the giving of legal advice does not as a matter of course raise iniquity."
As the EJ accepted the Respondent's interpretation of the email it is to be taken as incorporated into his decision. The Respondent's interpretation was set out in paragraph 58:
"The Respondent's position as to the interpretation of the e-mail, is as follows. Looking at the e-mail at page 181 it is quite clear that the "opportunities" referred to in the first paragraph is about reorganising the whole structure. So, it is not clear at all who first came up with the idea of the effect that this might have on the Claimant amongst the other lawyers involved. In the second paragraph it refers to the process applying "across the board to the UK legal population including the individual", ie the Claimant and so is not an e-mail just about him. If "done with appropriate safeguards and in the right circumstances", is clearly about the Claimant but is a standard piece of advice from lawyers when dealing with redundancy. The last sentence refers to "proceedings", but it is not clear it is a reference to the extant proceedings. What is clear is that there were concerns about the Claimant from 2011 onwards there were significant concerns about the Claimant's performance. This is something that lawyers do when dealing with reduction of the workforce. Paras 23 to 26 Claimant's submissions allegations are not born out as a difference between options in carrying out redundancy and carrying out a scheme of victimisation."
"� the assumption made by the Claimant is that advice given about possible grounds for dismissal equates to advice about how to dismiss [dis]honestly or because of discrimination/ victimisation. The language of the e-mail cannot be read in that way. �"
Question 2: Does the email of 29 April 2016 disclose a strong prima facie case or a prima facie case of iniquity?
"I do not find that it discloses a strong prima facie case of iniquity. I have considered the authorities cited and the submissions made and I accept the Respondent's submissions as to what is required for the iniquity exception to apply. Whilst of course protection against discrimination and victimisation is important, it is a tort, and to elevate it to the status required to disapply legal advice privilege, goes too far. The case law supports as much and I am specifically bolstered in this finding by Norris J at BBGP at pages 318 & 319, Schiemann LJ in Eustice at paragraph 1250H, Walsh and Dadourian."
"� The extent to which this is the speaker's slant on the matter or legal advice given is not known. But again it simply refers to what at most is action relating to tortuous [sic] claims and not excepted by the iniquity principle."
"� is a case of clear evidence of a dishonest not to say fraudulent purpose and in breach of fiduciary duty and not analogous to the case before this Tribunal." [74]
The submission of the Respondent on Dadourian Group & Another v Simms & Another [2008] EWHC 186 (Ch), also referred to in paragraph 85 of the judgment, was relied upon as stating that for iniquity to be established "there has to be strong evidence of fraud".
The Grounds of Appeal
Ground 1
The Tribunal erred by failing to rule that the strong prima facie interpretation of the email is that it recorded advice for the purpose of victimising or discriminating against the Claimant
"� At its highest it is an [extremely] indiscreet conversation by an unknown lawyer relaying a strategy clearly not with the Respondent's permission to do so and no doubt without [her employer's] permission to do so. The extent to which this is the speaker's slant on the matter or legal advice given is not known. But again it simply refers to what at most is action relating to tortious claims and not excepted by the iniquity principle."
Discussion and Conclusion
"� In the end, we are concerned with the interpretation of a document, and it is well established that that is a matter of law, not fact, in the courts of all parts of the United Kingdom. Of course, where there are relevant findings of primary fact (or even, at least in some cases, of secondary fact) relevant to interpretation, a Tribunal's finding will deserve particular respect, but that does not arise in this case. �"
Ground 2
The Tribunal erred by holding that victimising or discriminating against the Claimant by dismissing him was insufficiently serious to count as relevant "iniquity"
"The doctrine of legal professional privilege is rooted in the public interest, which requires that hopeless and exaggerated claims and unsound and spurious defences be so far as possible discouraged, and civil disputes so far as possible settled without resort to judicial decision. To this end it is necessary that actual and potential litigants, be they claimants or respondents, should be free to unburden themselves without reserve to their legal advisers, and their legal advisers be free to give honest and candid advice on a sound factual basis, without fear that these communications may be relied on by an opposing party if the dispute comes before the court for decision. It is the protection of confidential communications between client and legal adviser which lies at the heart of legal professional privilege �"
"� involved a case where a solicitor's advice regarding disposing of property at an undervalue was held to fall within the exemption of privilege (referred to a iniquity). � in Eustice there was an allegation that the legal advice was sought to frustrate the mortgagee's rights to the property because the mortgagors regarded the mortgagee bank as interfering with family assets, a situation which the Respondent states is miles away from the one in the present case."
"It will be noted that in the last sentence cited Bingham LJ referred to the "absence of iniquity." In so doing he was recognising the effect of a line of cases which have established that advice sought or given for the purpose of effecting iniquity is not privileged. The present appeal is concerned essentially with the question whether the effecting of transactions at an undervalue for the purpose of prejudicing the interests of a creditor can be regarded as "iniquity" in this context. "Iniquity" is I believe, without having done any research on the point, Bingham LJ's word. The case law refers to "crime or fraud" (Reg v Cox and Railton (1884) 14 QBD 153, 165), "criminal or unlawful" (Bullivant v Attorney-General for Victoria [1901] AC 196, 201), and "all forms of fraud and dishonesty such as fraudulent breach of trust, fraudulent conspiracy, trickery and sham contrivances" (Crescent Farm (Sidcup) Sports Ltd v Sterling Offices Ltd [1972] Ch 553, 565). The case law indicates that "fraud" is in this context used in a relatively wide sense. Thus in Gamlen Chemical Co (UK) Ltd v Rochem Ltd (unreported), 7 December 1979; Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Transcript No. 777 of 1979 Goff LJ cited and approved a passage in the judgment of Goulding J in the court below [1983] RPC 1, 8, where he had said in the in the language of an age which has passed:
"For servants during their employment and in breach of their contractual duty of fidelity to their master to engage in a scheme, secretly using their master's time and money, to take the master's customers and employees and make profit from them in a competing business built up to receive themselves on leaving the master's service, I would have thought that commercial men and lawyers alike would say that that is fraud."
On the other hand the courts have shown themselves reluctant to extend the concept indefinitely and have warned against the indiscriminate setting aside of legal privilege. Thus in the Gamlen case, 7 December 1979 Goff LJ stated:
"the court must in every case, of course, be satisfied that what is prima facie proved really is dishonest, and not merely disreputable or a failure to maintain good ethical standards and must bear in mind that legal professional privilege is a very necessary thing and is not lightly to be overthrown, but on the other hand, the interests of victims of fraud must not be overlooked. Each case depends on its own facts."
In Crescent Farm (Sidcup) Sports Ltd v Sterling Offices Ltd [1972] Ch 533 the court was not willing to extend the concept to the tort of inducing a breach of contract."
"Although the case law refers to crime or fraud or dishonesty (such as fraudulent breach of trust, fraudulent conspiracy, trickery or sham contrivances) it is plain that the term "fraud" is used in a relatively wide sense: Eustice's case [1995] 1 WLR 1238, 1249D. So a scheme to effect transactions at an undervalue was sufficient (Eustice's case); as was deliberate misrepresentation for the purpose of securing a mortgage advance (Nationwide Building Society v Various Solicitors [1999] PNLR 52, 72); or making a disposition with the intention of defeating a spouse's claim for financial relief (C v C (Privilege) [2008] 1 FLR 115); or the establishment by employees, in breach of a duty of fidelity to their employer, of a rival business: Gamlen Chemical Co (UK) Ltd v Rochem Ltd (No 2) (1979) 124 SJ 276 and Walsh Automation (Europe) Ltd v Bridgeman [2002] EWHC 1344 (QB). The enumeration of examples is useful only in so far as it enables some underlying theme or connectedness to be identified. In each of these cases the wrongdoer has gone beyond conduct which merely amounts to a civil wrong; he has indulged in sharp practice, something of an underhand nature where the circumstances required good faith, something which commercial men would say was a fraud or which the law treats as entirely contrary to public policy. (I borrow language from Gamlen and from Williams v Quebrada Railway Land and Copper Co [1895] 2 Ch 751.)"
The iniquity in BBGP Ltd was that the material for which privilege was claimed included advice regarding a plan to remove for cause a party to a dispute who was a partner and thus deprive it of compensation together with either covert plans. Norris J held that conduct of that character was sufficient to engage the iniquity principle.
"35. � The sex and race discrimination legislation seeks to eradicate what the Court of Appeal have referred to as the 'very great evil' of discrimination - see Jones v Tower Boot [1997] IRLR 168, and I consider that it is very much in the public interest that allegations of unlawful discrimination in the workplace are heard and properly determined by the employment tribunal to whom complaint is made, as the appropriate forum under the legislation. Further, it is widely recognised that cases involving allegations of sex and race discrimination are peculiarly fact-sensitive and can only properly be determined after full consideration of all the facts - see Anyanwu v South Bank Students' Union and South Bank University [2001] IRLR 305, and in particular the speeches of Lord Hope and Lord Steyn."
Counsel submitted that there is a public interest in having discrimination cases heard with all relevant evidence. The iniquity evidenced in the email of 29 April 2016 is seeking to disguise an act of victimisation or discrimination as a dismissal for redundancy. This is a deceit falling within the iniquity principle. To preserve privilege in the email would be to withhold important evidence of discrimination and victimisation.
Discussion and Conclusion
"� At its highest, the e-mail discloses advice on how to handle a possible redundancy of the Claimant as part of a UK wide process by which it would be reducing the number of lawyers it employed and acknowledges the risk that the Claimant might take legal action but points to the wider context as in effect justification. �"
Advising that taking a certain course of action runs a risk of being held unlawful whether the illegality be breach of contract, discrimination or even breach of fiduciary duty is not in itself iniquitous. Giving advice that a certain course of action which may be unlawful could be taken shades into iniquity. Advising how a fraud could be perpetrated as in Crescent Farms would clearly be an iniquity, as would advice on how to breach a fiduciary duty as in Gamlen. However advising termination which would be a breach of a notice provision in an employee's contract may well not be relevant conduct usefully characterised by Norris J in BBGP Ltd paragraph 62 as going:
"� beyond conduct which merely amounts to a civil wrong; he has indulged in sharp practice, something of an underhand nature where the circumstances required good faith, something which commercial men would say was a fraud or which the law treats as entirely contrary to public policy. �"
Disposal