Disclaimer.
As many readers will be aware, early last summer British Gas Trading Limited (BG) engaged an Advocate of some renown to argue, before Lady Poole in Scotland’s
second highest court, The Court of
Session, that I should be prevented from continuing to produce this Blog and that the five published Episodes, should be taken down. The
presiding judge, Lady Poole was hardly impressed (cf. Daily Mail 17/6/20).
She did, however, agree to the removal of the first two Episodes having adjudged – by a “narrow margin” - that they incorporated “a threat” to publish “defamatory” claims in later Episodes. What concerned Lady
Poole was the possibility of unsubstantiated claims likely to suggest BG had resorted to “criminality” in order to cover-up violations of The Law and Industry Regulations.
Such claims, according to Her Ladyship,
could not be published without probative evidence. As a law-abiding Scot who
reveres this country’s Legal System
above all other Institutions, it would not occur to me to test Lady Poole’s
adjudication. If only someone could provide me with “probative evidence” that BG had violated The Law. Grazie Deo, the
most unlikely “someone” did! Consequently, there are no “unsubstantiated” allegations in this Episode. None. What there is, are facts
which makes the revelations in this Episode
“completely” and not just “substantially” true; as per the requirements of the new Defamation and Malicious Publications (Scotland) Act 2021.
Episode 9.
"The cancer of criminality".
Before we consider BG’s
actions regarding its attempts to deceive, it is worth looking at the following
extracts from Criminal Law in England
& Wales and in Scotland:
Section 2 of the 2006 Fraud Act (England
& Wales) includes the following:
[If a party makes a] false representation dishonestly
knowing that the representation was or might be
untrue or misleading
with intent to make a gain for himself or
another, to cause loss to another or to expose another to risk of loss
[s/he will have violated The Act].
Criminal Law (Consolidation) (Scotland) Act
1995.
44. False statements and declarations.
(1) Any person who—
(a) being lawfully sworn, wilfully makes a
statement which is material for that purpose and is required or authorised by law to make a
statement on oath for any purpose; and (b) which he knows to be false or does not believe
to be true, shall be
guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding five years or to a fine or to both such fine and imprisonment.
On Monday November 21 2016, Ombudsman
Services: Energy (OS) informed BG that it was to investigate a claim
that it had withheld tariffs from its customers in the town of Stornoway. BG responded by lodging a Formal Appeal against OS’s decision to open such an Investigation. It worked. Five days
later OS terminated its Investigation on the basis that it had:
“…reviewed
the available information (in BG’s Formal Appeal) and agree that we will not be able to consider [the] complaint.” Clearly the “available information”, upon which OS
based its decision to terminate an Investigation
must have been dispositive of the fact that its decision to launch an Investigation was wrong.
Were it otherwise, it would reveal BG
had falsely informed OS which would have been in violation
of criminal law (cf. the 2006 Fraud Act).
The “available information” included: a) "[A] document which British Gas forwarded to the Claimant prior to 25th November 2016 advising Ombudsman Services: Energy could not help with his complaint”
and b) “Numerous
documents which British
Gas informed the Ombudsman
Services: Energy on 25th November 2016 that it had sent to the
claimant., regarding the [BG]
policy regarding the "propane gas supply in Stornoway"”
The above cited “available information”,
which is abstracted from Court Orders
issued to BG on September 18 last
year, reveals BG clearly violated
both criminal law (cf. the 2006 Fraud Act) and industry regulations (Energy Company Obligation Scheme), because a) BG has a statutory obligation
to advise all of its customers
of the fact that OS may be able to
help if they have a complaint, not that “it cannot” and b) BG, in accordance with the 1995 Gas Act is prohibited from having
a discrete policy in its “Piped Propane
Estate” businesses, of which Stornoway is one. BG, therefore, in its Formal
Appeal of November 25 2016 proffered demonstrably false information to OS for the specific purpose of stopping
an ongoing Investigation. That was
the start of its criminal dishonesty. It was to get worse. Much, much worse. Let’s look: On June 5 last year, I
formally requested BG’s counsel
provide me with the first of the above cited documents. Later that day “on instruction”,
he advised me “My client cannot locate the document”. In addition, he
advised me his client had forwarded a copy of the “specified document” to OS. He
also cautioned me that it would be pointless to lodge a Recovery of Documents Application with The Court in an effort to obtain the document. Having considered his pro
bono advice most carefully for a number of milliseconds, I lodged a Recovery of Documents Application
with The Court.
At a Hearing
called to consider that application (Sept 17 20200), BG’s counsel argued that Court Orders
requiring his client submit that and other documents should not be granted on
the basis that “…it
could not locate the documents” besides which it had “forwarded
copies to OS through the (e-communications
channel) the
Peppermint Portal.” “Not being able
to find documents” it had relied on in a Formal Appeal which was
sent to OS with the stated purpose
of stopping a legitimate investigation was not, in the Sheriff’s estimation, “reason enough to have The Court rule in BG’s favour”.
Consequently, he issued Court Orders compelling BG to submit the “specified documents”.
BG had ten days from receipt of
these Orders (Sep 18 last year) to hand-over the “specified documents”
to The Court. It didn’t. In
response, a Hearing was called for
Dec 12th 2020 at which BG
would be required submit the documents “specified”
in the Court Orders. Or not! At that Hearing, BG once again informed The
Court that it “could
not locate the documents” but it could assure The Court, it had “sent copies to OS via the Peppermint Portal.”
A further Hearing was scheduled for
Feb 1st this year.
Feb 1st 2021: Deja
vous all over again: “My client cannot locate the documents, but it did
send copies to OS via the Peppermint Portal…” But this time with the
qualification, “…although the Peppermint Portal, at my client’s end, is obsolete and it (BG) cannot, therefore, retrieve the documents”.
All the while this claim was being continually asserted, I was in communication
with OS in an attempt to recover all communications referencing my name
which it had received from BG since
October 2016. OS was more than
accommodating: It forwarded me the 300+ documents it had received from BG, containing my name, from 2013 –
none of which, mais quelle surprise, corresponded to the documents
“specified” in the Court Orders. At the next Hearing then (March 1st), BG’s new claim that it “may or may not” have sent copies of
the “specified” documents to OS, clearly exhausted the Sheriff’s
patience. He closed proceedings by advising me it may well be, "time to lodge a Special Recovery of Documents Application." In defiance of further pro bono advice
from BG’s counsel (he really is most
considerate) vis-à-vis the futility
of lodging such, I did make a Special
Recovery of Documents Application and a Hearing
was called to consider it on April 12th. That was to become quite a day: A day to remember, in fact.
A Special Recovery of
Documents Order, if granted, is a legal tool of considerable heft: it can
result in The Court appointing a Commissioner
to search the premises of any litigant which has failed to comply with Court Orders - not something BG would welcome; you wouldn’t think.
But how to avoid such an eventuality? Here’s how: In response to the opening
question in the April 12th Hearing
(Does BG have the documents specified in the Court Orders of Sep 18 2020?)
counsel for BG proffered a response which
absolutely guaranteed The Court would
not appoint a Commissioner. He answered thus:
“No Mi
Lord, the documents were never written and therefore, do not exist.”
Yes, you did read that correctly! Counsel for BG did say that. Out loud, in a
Scottish Court, he blithely revealed the “specified documents”
his client had relied on to have an OS
Investigation closed-down and which it had him assure The Court, over the course of three unnecessary Hearings, it “had sent to OS”, were,
as a matter of recorded fact, fictitious.
They had been imagined, not written,
by his client! From Sep 17 2020 until Feb 1st this year, therefore,
when BG instructed its counsel to
inform The Court that it had sent “documents” specified in “Court
Orders” to another party, it was issuing “improper instructions” to a counsel who has a professional duty “not to mislead The Court”: On this issue specifically, The Law Society of Scotland’s Code
of Conduct for Solicitors is spring-water clear: “Solicitors must never knowingly give false
or misleading information to the court…” or, “…accept
improper instructions, for example to assist a client in a matter which
[s/he] know(s) to be criminal or fraudulent”. Given so, one might
assume that BG’s “instructions” will, at some point, be
measured against the Criminal Law (Consolidation) (Scotland) Act 1995.
As to its counsel: It
would be quite wrong to assume that he was aware he was misleading The Court on the numerous occasions he falsely
advised it that his client “could not locate” the specified
documents and that it had “sent copies of the (specified) documents, to OS.” He may
not have been. Until April 12th this year, that is. On that day he
most assuredly did become aware that when BG
had instructed him to advise The Court
that it had “forwarded
the documents specified in Court
Orders to OS”, it had, clearly, instructed him “improperly”. Which is why I wrote to him
the following week to advise:
“…you too have been negatively affected by your client’s dishonesty:
On four separate occasions you attended Hearings with instructions to proffer false and dishonest
information to The Court: Even as you were being
instructed otherwise, your client knew it had not sent the “specified
document” to OS through
the “Peppermint Portal”; or by
any other means. One can only assume, as both a Scottish solicitor who has
sworn an oath never to “mislead The Court” and as a practicing
Christian, you must have been horrified to have discovered that you had been
instructed by a duplicitous client to falsely advise The
Court on so many occasions.”
Horrified or not, he is, despite being fully aware
that his client issued him “improper instructions” over the course of at
least four Court Hearings, still
representing BG. And we know this because he emailed me last week in
that capacity - in response to an
offer of giving his client a preview of this Episode - to advise me not to publish. As to why, I am not to publish, he was rather vague, but he did imply another visit to the
Court of Session should I, once again, ignore his pro bono advice. One can only imagine
the directions he will give the unwitting Advocate he manages to convince to Represent (The Court of Session is
above his pay-grade) his client at that Hearing.
So let’s do that:
(Imagined)
Directions to Advocate
Mi Lady/Lord, British
Gas Trading Limited demands this nasty, nasty (stamp foot
repeatedly) individual, who has published a Blog Post in which he openly accuses
my client of (pause and stamp) “Criminality”, be ordered to remove that Post
immediately. Furthermore, we demand he be punished severely for making these (stamp
foot repeatedly) completely unfounded claims in the first place. The claim that British Gas severally and over a period
of years violated Criminal Law for specified purpose is (pause, forza) Outrageous! On the
flimsiest of (pause) “supposed” evidence, he claims British
Gas, in violation of the 2006 Fraud Act, falsely informed Ombudsman Services: Energy - for the stated purpose of terminating a
legitimate Investigation – of the existence of numerous documents which were,
as a matter of recorded fact, “imaginary”. He goes on to claim that British Gas,
thereafter, in an effort to ensure its “unlawful misinforming” of Ombudsman
Services: Energy was never revealed, treated Stornoway Sheriff Court with
unalloyed contempt by instructing its counsel to inform it, over an extended
period and on numerous occasions, that British Gas had sent these
“imaginary documents” to Ombudsman Services: Energy through an e-communications
channel.
And the “supposed”
evidence for these patently outrageous claims? My friend here, outside counsel
for British Gas Trading limited – a man of some (molta forza) repute – told him so! Yes indeed Mi
Lady/Lord this despicable litigant is actually claiming, based on the simple fact
that Mr Philip Knight of Womble Bond Dickinson (UK) LLP, stood up in Stornoway Sheriff
Court on April 12th this year and said - in response to the question:
Do you have the documents specified in the Court Orders? - No, Mi Lord, the
documents were never written and therefore, do not exist.” that that statement somehow
proves British Gas violated “criminal law”! In this misguided litigant’s (sarcastically) “opinion”,
my friend’s private asseveration in open-court, can somehow be construed as “evidence”
that when this fine company intimated to Ombudsman Services: Energy and a
Scottish Court that it possessed documentation which was in fact “imaginary” it
was somehow being dishonest! I ask you!
I should conclude Mi
Lady/Lord by warning this court that if litigants like this can get away with
citing the in-court (de facto under
oath) utterances of Scottish solicitors as “evidence” then it’s only a matter
of time before courts will be asked to accept “video recordings” of “crimes
being committed” as reliable “evidence”. I urge Your Lady/Lordship to dismiss
the preposterous claim that, just because my friend here revealed British Gas’
nefarious actions in open court, these revelations can be appropriated by
people like this (sigh loudly), to justify The Truth!
Addendum.
For most people cancer is not an abstract disease, it is a very
real yet incomprehensible threat to them and to those they know and love. And
the questions most people affected by this scourge immediately ask are: a) Can
it be treated? And b) What caused it? The answers are: “It depends how long it’s been growing”, and, “A single malignant cell which started reproducing uncontrolledly.”
One single malignant cell. That’s how all biological cancers - slow or fast
growing – begin: with a single malignant cell. It’s also how all criminal
enterprises, large or small, begin – with one malignant action which then
metastasises uncontrolledly: In 1972, G Gordon Liddy, an agent in the then President
Nixon’s Administration, thought it a
good idea to bug the Watergate Building
in Washington DC, in which the Democratic
National Committee was renting space. This single malignant idea in July
1972 was to end just over two years later with the disgraced Nixon resigning
the American Presidency and a large number of his co-conspirators, including
Liddy, going to prison. By then the list of crimes committed in an attempt to
cover-up the original offence had, like cancer cells in an unchecked tumour,
multiplied exponentially. The original “crime”
had, in fact, metastasised into a criminal enterprise.
On November 25 2016, British
Gas Trading Limited requested Ombudsman
Services: Energy terminate an Investigation
into my allegation that it had withheld a specific gas tariff from Stornoway
customers including myself. That request took the form of an Official Appeal which informed Ombudsman Services: Energy that it, (BG) had sent me “specified” documents which would render any such an Investigation unnecessary. Almost five
years later, BG in the most astonishing
admission of illegality, informed a Scottish
Court that a number of the documents specified in its original Appeal to Ombudsman Services: Energy
were, as a matter of fact, imaginary!
That admission – given in open court in order to prevent a search of its HQ – also revealed British Gas had, on numerous occasions, “improperly instructed” its counsel to falsely inform a Scottish Court that, although it “could not locate”,
what it must have known to be fictitious documents, it had most assuredly “forwarded them
to Ombudsman Services: Energy”. “Watergate”, it isn’t. But
if you are citizen living in Scotland whose rights, freedoms and
responsibilities are both protected and governed by its Legal System – and that includes the right not to be lied to by
your energy-supplier – it is far more
important. Attempting to cover-up an incompetent burglary is one thing: Misinforming a Scottish
Court in an attempt to cover-up a blatant violation of criminal law, is quite another: In fact, it is nothing short of an attack on our Legal System; an attack which provoked the MP for this constituency to observe, “This is now a serious matter for the courts”. He’s right, of course, because ultimately an
attack on our Legal System, is an attack on us all.
If this is, as you claim "probatively" true, how come you're the only person in the country who gives a s---?
ReplyDeleteI'm not. Ofgem and Police Scotland are looking into it right now. Also, and I'm surprised you didn't notice, but the MP for the Western Isles, Angus MacNeil, is very concerned about the new developments.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't boast too much about your MP... see below.
DeleteIf the appeal had, as you say "imaginary" documents in it maybe lots of its appeals did too.
ReplyDeleteSo glad you have such an esteemed MP fighting on your behalf
ReplyDeletehttps://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/sleaze-mp-my-shame-at-3-in-bed-teen-950312
For goodness sakes, can't you let bygones be bygones? Doesn't everyone make the odd mistake!!!
DeleteI made that very point to Jonathan Brearley, Ofgem's Chief Executive Officer. I'm sure the possibility that other Appeals incorporated "misinformation" will be investigated.
ReplyDeleteIt doesn't matter what "Randy Andy" or anyone else thinks about Angus MacNeil, the fact is he's a serving MP and his views carry weight. If an MP is concerned about British Gas abusing the Legal System, that's not something which can simply be ignored.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely correct DM. What MacNeil did may be disgraceful, but it didn't amount to an attack on our Legal System.
ReplyDelete