• news-banner

    Expert Insights

Safeguarding search orders and the role of public interest: lessons to be learned from recent case law

Search orders are one of, if not the most, draconian orders the courts can make. The recent decision in Calor Gas Ltd v Chorley Bottle Gas Ltd and others (Calor Gas) contains two points of particular significance:

  • The extent to which questions of public interest, and in particular public safety, may be factored into the court’s decision.
  • How giving careful consideration to making execution of a search order “COVID-secure” will assist the applicant’s cause when the court is weighing up the proportionality of the order.

The safeguarding measures taken by the applicant also stand in stark contrast to the failings observed in this respect by the Court of Appeal in another recent judgment, TBD (Owen Holland) Ltd v Simons and others (TBD).

Background

The claimant supplied branded liquid cylinders of gas to retailers, who in turn supplied their customers with these full liquid gas cylinders. The cylinders were labelled “property of and to be filled only by” the claimant. The cylinders were supplied by the claimant full and returned to it empty by the retailers, who collected empties from their customers.

The claimant’s proposed claim was that, in breach of various duties owed to it, the defendants had been undertaking a DIY re-filling exercise, in which the claimant’s cylinders had been refilled using bulk tanks containing liquid gas delivered by third parties and using equipment not belonging to the claimant to do so (“the equipment”).

The claimant applied, without notice, for a search order to enable identification and retrieval of its cylinders, and the examination and photographing or videoing of the equipment. In its application, the claimant made clear its concerns about the health and safety implications associated with DIY filling and more broadly about public safety in relation to cylinders which had been refilled.

The law

An application for a without notice search order attracts the following five-component approach, as set out by the High Court in BMW AG v Premier Alloy Wheels (UK) Limited and others:

  • There must be a strong prima facie case of a civil cause of action. Neither suspicion nor the existence of a serious question to be tried is sufficient.
  • The danger to the applicant to be avoided by the grant of the order must be serious, and, if the order is to forestall the destruction of evidence, the evidence must be of major importance.
  • There must be clear evidence that the respondent has incriminating documents or articles in its possession.
  • There must be a real possibility of the destruction or removal of evidence.
  • The harm likely to be caused by the execution of the order on the respondent and its business affairs must not be out of proportion to the legitimate object of that order.

Decision

Fordham J decided in favour of the claimant on each of the five criteria and granted the application.

In particular, he took account of the submission that the public safety implications (viewed through the prism of commercial and reputational harm to the claimant) amply constituted serious harm to the claimant, which was only to be avoided by the grant of the order sought. The judge observed that he was not aware of any authority precluding reliance on this wider perspective and he was satisfied that there was a clear and cogent link to the reputational position of the claimant within the regulatory world in which it operated. He stated that:

“the court can properly be asked to have regard to public health and safety risks, in considering the claimant’s position: linked to the cause of action; linked to the implications of not making the order; and the risks as to evidence and as to property.”

Safeguards

In TBD, the Court of Appeal held that insufficient safeguards had been provided for in the search order, in particular in the context of the imaging of large quantities of data. This resulted in what the court held to be the applicant’s impermissible searching and use of the data retrieved, including data likely covered by legal professional privilege and potentially raising privacy issues.

By contrast, in Calor Gas, Fordham J found that the order had been sufficiently restricted by the claimant. He noted:

“The order sought and made involves no entry into any residential premises […] The search pursuant to the order is for the claimant’s own property, and is a search to examine and photograph but not to remove the bulk tanks and other equipment. The only items being removed are the claimant’s own property […] There is no searching, less still removal, of any documentation or of computers. Nor […] is there any ‘doorstep’ requirement that questions be answered as to commercial dealings undertaken by the defendants: the only requirement for information during the search relates to identification as to where relevant items covered by the order are to be found.”

“COVID undertakings”

The decision in Calor Gas underlines the importance of giving careful thought to the parameters of the search, which in turn increases the prospects of success with the application. The applicant had taken a deliberately restrictive approach to the scope of the search order in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. This assisted the court when it came to evaluating the proportionality of the order sought.

The decision also provides examples of appropriate safety measures that can be incorporated into an order. Here, the order sought contained “COVID undertakings” which required the supervising solicitor:

  • Not to permit any person in the search party to enter the premises without undergoing a temperature test and not to permit anyone with a temperature above 38 degrees celsius to enter the premises.
  • Before allowing any member of the search party to enter the premises, to inquire whether anyone on the premises was clinically vulnerable to COVID-19 or was otherwise shielding. If so, the supervising solicitor was required to stop the search to allow them to leave the premises.
  • Use best endeavours to comply with social distancing, wherever practicable, and to ensure that every member of the search party wore plastic gloves and facemasks at all times when on the premises.
  • To ensure that every member of the search party had hand sanitising gel and carried it at all times on the premises, before, during and after the search.
  • To bring spare plastics gloves and facemasks and offer them to the defendants and any other person at the premises.

This article was first published on Practical Law.

Our thinking

  • New Hong Kong crypto regime: trading platforms falling foul already?

    Patrick Chan

    Insights

  • What next for HS2?

    Richard Flenley

    Quick Reads

  • Mediation as a pillar of dispute resolution: it’s happening, embrace it

    Jamie Cartwright

    Quick Reads

  • Hong Kong’s top court makes declaration in favour of same-sex partnerships

    Lisa Wong

    Insights

  • A warning to all businesses: significant fine underscores the importance of maintaining workplace Health & Safety

    Rory Partridge

    Quick Reads

  • Common construction claims in Bahrain

    Mazin Al Mardhi

    Insights

  • Enforcement of Foreign Judgments - UAE: DIFC

    Patrick Gearon FCIArb

    Insights

  • Financial Reporter quotes Rhys Novak on a new FCA review into the treatment of PEPs

    Rhys Novak

    In the Press

  • Enforcement of Judgments

    Patrick Gearon FCIArb

    Insights

  • The Supreme Court's decision in PACCAR: litigation funding stopped in its trucks?

    Hanh Nguyen

    Insights

  • Investigating fraud: an expansion of legal professional privilege?

    Simon Heatley

    Insights

  • Product compliance and Brexit - UK Government concedes to CE markings indefinite recognition

    Jamie Cartwright

    Quick Reads

  • Recognising financial abuse in a relationship

    Vanessa Duff

    Quick Reads

  • Trading insolvently or trading out of difficulty? Are we being naughty or did we have the best intentions? Part 2

    Claudine Morgan

    Insights

  • Conflicts of Interest in International Commercial Arbitration

    Dalal Alhouti

    Insights

  • UAE and the Grey List: Brief Update

    Karl Masi

    Insights

  • Sally Ashford and Oliver Auld write for International Adviser on the role of a trustee in a family trust

    Sally Ashford

    In the Press

  • Charles Russell Speechlys welcomes Head of International Arbitration in Dubai

    Thomas R. Snider

    News

  • Trading insolvently or trading out of difficulty? Part 1

    Claudine Morgan

    Insights

  • Has the Orpéa plan impaired shareholder's consent? - Le plan de sauvegarde d'Orpéa n'a-t-il pas vicié le consentement des actionnaires historiques ?

    Dimitri-André Sonier

    Quick Reads

  • The Athletic quotes Daniel McDonagh on multi-club ownership regulations

    Daniel McDonagh

    In the Press

  • Food Management Today quotes Jamie Cartwright on the World Health Organisation’s assessment of aspartame

    Jamie Cartwright

    In the Press

  • Don’t push it… Quincecare duty clarified

    Caroline Greenwell

    Quick Reads

  • Pandora Papers: HMRC nudge taxpayers to come out of their box

    Hugh Gunson

    Quick Reads

  • United Arab Emirates Bribery & Corruption

    Ghassan El Daye

    Insights

  • It was a mistake

    Hugh Gunson

    Insights

  • Protecting Software and Apps – the Legal Do’s and Don’t’s

    Mary Bagnall

    Insights

  • Charles Russell Speechlys strengthens its international credentials with the appointment of Vanessa Duff

    Vanessa Duff

    News

  • DIAC Issues First Annual Report

    Georgia Fullarton

    Quick Reads

  • Dispute Resolution: The Case for Mediation

    Marjan Mirrezaei

    Quick Reads

  • Machinery Regulations respond to the rise of AI

    Jamie Cartwright

    Quick Reads

  • Delay could bar your probate claim

    Katelyn Silver

    Quick Reads

  • Saudi Center for Commercial Arbitration publishes new Arbitration Rules

    Peter Smith

    Quick Reads

  • From Farm to Fork: The Vital Role of Traceability in Meeting the UK's Sustainable Food Demands and Fighting Food Fraud

    Jamie Cartwright

    Quick Reads

  • Latest drama in UK’s Succession-style family feud over estate of self-made millionaire, Kevin Patrick Reeves

    Jessica Davies

    Quick Reads

  • ESG Litigation - new laws, same procedures?

    Jamie Cartwright

    Quick Reads

  • Greenwashing Guidance Gathers Momentum: the Crackdown is Nigh

    Peter Carlyon

    Quick Reads

  • Dubai announces its plan to streamline the enforcement of civil judgments and arbitral awards

    Peter Smith

    Quick Reads

  • Better, Faster, Leaner – Bahrain unveils blueprint for improved justice system

    Simone Sancandi

    Quick Reads

  • New and enhanced EPR framework: more stringent responsibilities on producers – what does this mean for your business?

    Ciara Coyle

    Quick Reads

Back to top