LoginSubscribe Now
Follow Us
Sign up to our free newsletter
Solicitors Journal LogoInforming the legal profession since 1856

Find the knowledge you need from the SJ library of over 20,000 legal articles

Search now
Solicitors Journal Logo
  • Legal News
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Practice Notes
  • Business
  • International
  • Court Reports
  • AI Search
  • Digital Edition
  • Subscription Options
  • Advertise with Us
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • FAQ
    • Guide to Authors
Solicitors Journal

Informing the legal profession since 1856.

Follow us

Topics

  • Legal News
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Practice Notes
  • Business
  • International
  • Court Reports

About

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • FAQ
  • Guide to Authors

Subscribe

  • Subscription Options
  • Digital Edition
  • Free Newsletter

Editorial

editorial@solicitorsjournal.com+44 (0)1223 750 755

Subscriptions

subscriptions@solicitorsjournal.com+44 (0)1223 750 755

Advertising

Advertise with usadvertising@solicitorsjournal.com+44 (0)1223 750 755

© 2026 Solicitors Journal in partnership with the International In-house Counsel Journal

ISSN 0038-1047  ·  Images: Freepix, Unsplash and by permission of the authors

Terms and ConditionsCookie PolicyPrivacy PolicyPLS Clear logoCopyright & permissions

Lloyds Developments v Accor Hotel Services: directors ordered to hand over phones despite deleted message uncertainty

19 Jun 2026Court Report
Share:
Lloyds Developments v Accor Hotel Services: directors ordered to hand over phones despite deleted message uncertainty

TCC orders former directors to surrender mobile devices even where relevant messages may be unrecoverable.

If you use your personal phone for company business, you may one day be required to hand it over, even if what you are looking for has probably been deleted. That is the practical upshot of Mr Justice Constable's judgement in Lloyds Developments Limited (in administration) v Accor Hotel Services UK Limited [2026] EWHC 1522 (TCC), a case which also doubles as a masterclass in how not to conduct high-value commercial litigation.

The underlying dispute involves a £180 million deceit claim by Lloyds Developments, now in administration, against Accor, the hotel group, arising from a hotel development project that ultimately collapsed. Accor's counter-narrative is that the project failed because of chronic underfunding and misappropriation of investors' money by the company's own directors, Rishipal Singh and Richard Diamond. With allegations of dishonesty flying in both directions and a trial set for November 2026, the question of whether those directors' personal mobile phones would be examined by an independent reviewer had already consumed years of satellite litigation and at least 55 court orders before this hearing.

The directors' position rested on two arguments. The first was practicality: a digital forensics expert concluded that deleted WhatsApp messages on iPhones are often technically unrecoverable and that recovery outcomes are "frequently nil". If the messages are probably gone, why impose the disruption and privacy intrusion of handing over a personal device? The second was privacy: the phones contained years of personal, confidential and potentially privileged material belonging to third parties, and forcing production was said to be disproportionate given what was likely to be found.

Constable J dispatched both arguments without much difficulty, and his reasoning on each point carries weight beyond this particular dispute.

On the question of recoverability, the judge noted that the forensic expert's language, that recovery is "often" or "frequently" unsuccessful, is equally consistent with success being "often" or "frequently" achieved. An unpredictable outcome is not the same as an improbable one, and the court is not required to treat uncertainty as a reason to abandon the exercise, particularly in a case where dishonesty is alleged. There was also a pointed observation that deleted messages may be more revealing, not less, than those the directors had been content to leave visible when submitting their phones for earlier, self-supervised disclosure exercises. The court was not prepared to treat a controlled and incomplete prior review as substantial compliance with its orders.

On privacy, the safeguards built into the process were decisive. The phones would go to an independent reviewer, not to the opposing party or its lawyers. Only material identified as responsive to the agreed disclosure parameters would ultimately be produced. The Court of Appeal had already considered and rejected the privacy objection when refusing permission to appeal an earlier order. Nothing in the new expert evidence changed that analysis.

The more durable point in the judgement concerns the common law right of a principal to inspect documents held by a former agent. The principle, established in Fairstar Heavy Transport v Adkins [2013] and Yasuda v Orion Marine Insurance [1995], is that this right extends to electronically stored material and survives the termination of the agency relationship. Importantly, as Colman J confirmed in Yasuda, the directors could not resist inspection simply because relevant material was mixed with irrelevant personal content. That principle predates smartphones but maps onto them with uncomfortable precision for anyone who has ever taken a work call on a personal device.

Constable J was also blunt about the litigation conduct that had made the application necessary. The case, he noted, has been bedevilled by delays, repeated non-compliance with disclosure obligations and a failure by the parties to co-operate in any manner consistent with modern litigation expectations. Costs were reduced by 20% across the board for both successful parties on account of duplication that better co-operation would have avoided. The directors were ordered to pay 80% of costs to both Lloyds and Accor, with Lloyds carrying a joint and several liability for Accor's costs should the directors fail to pay.

The message is straightforward. Use a personal phone for work, expect it to follow the work.

Latest Articles

If you use your personal phone for company business, you may one day be required to hand it over, even if what you are looking for has probably been deleted. That is the practical upshot of Mr Justice Constable's judgement in Lloyds Developments Limited (in administration) v Accor Hotel Services UK Limited [2026] EWHC 1522 (TCC), a case which also doubles as a masterclass in how not to conduct high-value commercial litigation.

The underlying dispute involves a £180 million deceit claim by Lloyds Developments, now in administration, against Accor, the hotel group, arising from a hotel development project that ultimately collapsed. Accor's counter-narrative is that the project failed because of chronic underfunding and misappropriation of investors' money by the company's own directors, Rishipal Singh and Richard Diamond. With allegations of dishonesty flying in both directions and a trial set for November 2026, the question of whether those directors' personal mobile phones would be examined by an independent reviewer had already consumed years of satellite litigation and at least 55 court orders before this hearing.

The directors' position rested on two arguments. The first was practicality: a digital forensics expert concluded that deleted WhatsApp messages on iPhones are often technically unrecoverable and that recovery outcomes are "frequently nil". If the messages are probably gone, why impose the disruption and privacy intrusion of handing over a personal device? The second was privacy: the phones contained years of personal, confidential and potentially privileged material belonging to third parties, and forcing production was said to be disproportionate given what was likely to be found.

Constable J dispatched both arguments without much difficulty, and his reasoning on each point carries weight beyond this particular dispute.

On the question of recoverability, the judge noted that the forensic expert's language, that recovery is "often" or "frequently" unsuccessful, is equally consistent with success being "often" or "frequently" achieved. An unpredictable outcome is not the same as an improbable one, and the court is not required to treat uncertainty as a reason to abandon the exercise, particularly in a case where dishonesty is alleged. There was also a pointed observation that deleted messages may be more revealing, not less, than those the directors had been content to leave visible when submitting their phones for earlier, self-supervised disclosure exercises. The court was not prepared to treat a controlled and incomplete prior review as substantial compliance with its orders.

On privacy, the safeguards built into the process were decisive. The phones would go to an independent reviewer, not to the opposing party or its lawyers. Only material identified as responsive to the agreed disclosure parameters would ultimately be produced. The Court of Appeal had already considered and rejected the privacy objection when refusing permission to appeal an earlier order. Nothing in the new expert evidence changed that analysis.

The more durable point in the judgement concerns the common law right of a principal to inspect documents held by a former agent. The principle, established in Fairstar Heavy Transport v Adkins [2013] and Yasuda v Orion Marine Insurance [1995], is that this right extends to electronically stored material and survives the termination of the agency relationship. Importantly, as Colman J confirmed in Yasuda, the directors could not resist inspection simply because relevant material was mixed with irrelevant personal content. That principle predates smartphones but maps onto them with uncomfortable precision for anyone who has ever taken a work call on a personal device.

Constable J was also blunt about the litigation conduct that had made the application necessary. The case, he noted, has been bedevilled by delays, repeated non-compliance with disclosure obligations and a failure by the parties to co-operate in any manner consistent with modern litigation expectations. Costs were reduced by 20% across the board for both successful parties on account of duplication that better co-operation would have avoided. The directors were ordered to pay 80% of costs to both Lloyds and Accor, with Lloyds carrying a joint and several liability for Accor's costs should the directors fail to pay.

The message is straightforward. Use a personal phone for work, expect it to follow the work.

Legal News desk contact: editorial@solicitorsjournal.com|PLS LogoCopyright & permissions
Spencer West wins key appeal case
Solicitors Journal

Spencer West wins key appeal case

Spencer West's victory in the Court of Appeal overturns a USD $2.5 million ruling against FMC Trading
News19 Jun 2026
SRA seeks to enhance risk identification
Solicitors Journal

SRA seeks to enhance risk identification

The SRA has launched a consultation to improve notification requirements for law firms in order to enhance risk assessment strategies
News19 Jun 2026
Legal departments become strategic business partners
Solicitors Journal

Legal departments become strategic business partners

The 2026 Law Department Management Benchmarking Report highlights legal departments’ evolution into strategic partners, providing data-driven insights that support efficient resource allocation and operational agility
News19 Jun 2026
Good Law Project v Reform UK: the data rights case that tests who can sue on behalf of others
Solicitors Journal

Good Law Project v Reform UK: the data rights case that tests who can sue on behalf of others

High Court refuses to strike out data subject access claim against Reform UK, finding the Good Law Project has arguable standing as a representative body.
Court Report19 Jun 2026
Hattons of London v Knightsbridge Collection: the coin dealer data theft that a CRM system and a cloud provider helped unravel
Solicitors Journal

Hattons of London v Knightsbridge Collection: the coin dealer data theft that a CRM system and a cloud provider helped unravel

Seven former employees found liable for conspiracy and breach of confidence after secretly building a rival business on stolen customer data.
Court Report19 Jun 2026
Pfizer v Competition and Markets Authority: the phenytoin saga enters its third decade with the CMA's original decision restored
Solicitors Journal

Pfizer v Competition and Markets Authority: the phenytoin saga enters its third decade with the CMA's original decision restored

Court of Appeal reinstates the CMA's finding that Pfizer and Flynn abused their dominant position, but wipes out the CAT's retaken decision on procedural fairness...
Court Report19 Jun 2026
Dexia v Comune di Torino: how hindsight and low interest rates became the basis for a €133m derivatives claim
Solicitors Journal

Dexia v Comune di Torino: how hindsight and low interest rates became the basis for a €133m derivatives claim

English court rejects Turin's bid to unwind two decades of interest rate swaps after the global financial crisis cut rates.
Court Report19 Jun 2026
Iconic Sports Eagle Investment v Textor: football, a $100m put option and a clarification of specific performance law
Solicitors Journal

Iconic Sports Eagle Investment v Textor: football, a $100m put option and a clarification of specific performance law

Commercial Court confirms a claimant need not be ready to perform at the contractual date if the other party has repudiated.
Court Report19 Jun 2026
Al-Uzaybi v Home Office: government's raid on special advocate's chambers exposes fault lines in closed proceedings
Solicitors Journal

Al-Uzaybi v Home Office: government's raid on special advocate's chambers exposes fault lines in closed proceedings

High Court condemns intelligence agencies' seizure of a special advocate's notes as a serious threat to judicial independence.
Court Report19 Jun 2026
Sheringham Shoal and Dudgeon Extensions Projco v Persons Unknown: offshore wind trumps fishing rights in injunction battle
Solicitors Journal

Sheringham Shoal and Dudgeon Extensions Projco v Persons Unknown: offshore wind trumps fishing rights in injunction battle

High Court grants windfarm developer injunction to clear fishing gear from survey area despite fishermen's objections.
Court Report19 Jun 2026
Connors v Bromley Borough Council: when changed planning policy cannot override years of enforcement defiance
Solicitors Journal

Connors v Bromley Borough Council: when changed planning policy cannot override years of enforcement defiance

High Court rules that seven years of non-compliance with enforcement notices can justify declining to consider a planning application on its merits.
Court Report19 Jun 2026
Laffy v WKCIC Group: why a false allegation without investigation is not always discrimination
Solicitors Journal

Laffy v WKCIC Group: why a false allegation without investigation is not always discrimination

The EAT upholds a tribunal's dismissal of direct discrimination claims despite a false and serious allegation going uninvestigated.
Court Report19 Jun 2026
SJ Interview: Paul Marco
Solicitors Journal

SJ Interview: Paul Marco

Paul Marco, Managing Partner of Trowers & Hamlins, speaks to Solicitors Journal
Interview26 May 2026
When the rules can't keep up
Solicitors Journal

When the rules can't keep up

From Westminster to the courts, the rules are being written faster than they can settle
Foreword1 Jun 2026