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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Norris & Anor v Haskins & Anor [2003] EWCA Civ 1084 (28 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1084.html Cite as: [2003] Fam Law 721, [2003] 2 FLR 1124, [2003] 4 Costs LR 591, [2003] 1 WLR 2960, [2003] WLR 2960, [2003] 3 FCR 136, [2003] EWCA Civ 1084 |
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(2) B1/2003/1271 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
(FAMILY DIVISION)
(1) The Hon Mr Justice Bennett
(2) Mr Bruce Blair QC Sitting as a
Deputy High Court Judge.
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE THORPE
and
LORD JUSTICE MANTELL
____________________
ALAN JOHN NORRIS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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PENELOPE CATHERINE NORRIS -and- WARREN GEORGE HASKINS -and- LESLEY ERICA HASKINS |
Respondent Appellant Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss Clare Renton (instructed by Kidd Rapinet) for the Respondent
(2) Mr V. Le Grice QC and Mr S. Webster (instructed by Guillaumes) for the Appellant
Mr M. Pointer QC and Mr Jonathan P. Swift (instructed by Williams Thompson) for the Respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss P. :
The background to costs orders
"44.3 Court's discretion and circumstances to be taken into account when exercising its discretion as to costs
(1) The court has discretion as to –
(a) whether costs are payable by one party to another;
(b) the amount of those costs; and
(c) when they are to be paid.
(2) If the court decides to make an order about costs –
(a) the general rule is that the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party; but
(b) the court may make a different order.
(3) The general rule does not apply to the following proceedings –
(a) proceedings in the Court of Appeal on an application or appeal made in connection with proceedings in the Family Division; or
(b) proceedings in the Court of Appeal from a judgment, direction, decision or order given or made in probate proceedings or family proceedings.
(4) In deciding what order (if any) to make about costs, the court must have regard to all the circumstances, including –
(a) the conduct of all the parties;
(b) whether a party has succeeded on part of his case, even if he has not been wholly successful; and
(c) any payment into court or admissible offer to settle made by a party which is drawn to the court's attention (whether or not made in accordance with Part 36).
(Part 36 contains further provisions about how the court's discretion is to be exercised where a payment into court or an offer to settle is made under that Part)
(5) The conduct of the parties includes –
(a) conduct before, as well as during, the proceedings and in particular the extent to which the parties followed any relevant pre-action protocol;
(b) whether it was reasonable for a party to raise, pursue or contest a particular allegation or issue;
(c) the manner in which a party has pursued or defended his case or a particular allegation or issue; and
(d) whether a claimant who has succeeded in his claim, in whole or in part, exaggerated his claim.
(6) The orders which the court may make under this rule include an order that a party must pay –
(a) a proportion of another party's costs;
(b) a stated amount in respect of another party's costs;
(c) costs from or until a certain date only;
(d) costs incurred before proceedings have begun;
(e) costs relating to particular steps taken in the proceedings;
(f) costs relating only to a distinct part of the proceedings; and
(g) interest on costs from or until a certain date, including a date before judgment.
(7) Where the court would otherwise consider making an order under paragraph (6)(f), it must instead, if practicable, make an order under paragraph (6)(a) or (c)."
"The court has an overall broad judicial discretion on costs."
Family Proceedings - Gojkovic v Gojkovic
"However, in the Family Division there still remains the necessity for some starting point. That starting point, in my judgment, is that costs prima facie follow the event (see Cumming-Bruce LJ in Singer (formerly Sharegin) v Sharegin [1984] FLR 114 at 119) but may be displaced much more easily than, and in circumstances which would not apply, in other divisions of the High Court. One important example is, as the judge pointed out, that it is unusual to order costs in children cases. In applications for financial relief the applicant (usually the wife) has to make the application in order to obtain an order. If the financial dispute can be resolved it is usual, and normally in the interests of both parties, that the applicant should obtain an order by consent; and if money is available and in the absence of special circumstances, such an agreement would usually include the applicant's costs of the application. If the application is contested and the applicant succeeds, in practice in the divorce registries around the country where most ancillary relief applications are tried, if there is money available and no special factors, the applicant spouse is prima facie entitled to, and likely to obtain, an order for costs against the respondent. The behaviour of one party, such as in material non-disclosure of documents, will be a material factor in the exercise of the court's discretion in making a decision as to who pays the costs.
There is, however, a minority of cases, of which the present appeal is an example, where the assets are substantial and an order for costs can (if appropriate) be made."
"It is therefore clear that Calderbank offers require to have teeth in order for them to be effective. This is recognised by the requirement in Ord 62, r 9 (and the equivalent CCR Ord 11, r 10) for the court to take account of Calderbank offers, and by analogy open offers, in exercising its discretion as to costs. There are certain preconditions. Both parties must make full and frank disclosure of all relevant assets, and put their cards on the table. Thereafter the respondent to an application must make a serious offer worthy of consideration. If he does so, then it is incumbent on the applicant to accept or reject the offer and, if the latter, to make her/his position clear and indicate in figures what she/he is asking for (a counter-offer). It is incumbent on both parties to negotiate if possible and at least to make an attempt to settle the case. This can be done either by open offers or by Calderbank offers, both adopted by the husband in this case. It is a matter for the parties which procedure they prefer. There is a very wide discretion in the court in awarding costs, and as Ormrod LJ said in McDonnell v McDonnell [1977] 1 All ER 766 at 770, [1977] 1 WLR 34 at 38, the Calderbank offer should influence but not govern the exercise of discretion.
There are many reasons which may affect the court in considering costs, such as culpability in the conduct of the litigation, for instance (as I have already indicated earlier) material non-disclosure of documents. Delay or excessive zeal in seeking disclosure are other examples. The absence of an offer or of a counter-offer may well be reflected in costs, or an offer made too late to be effective. The need to use all the available money to house the spouse and children of the family may also affect the exercise of the court's discretion. It would, however, be inappropriate, and indeed unhelpful, to seek to enumerate and possibly be thought to constrain in any way that wide exercise of discretion. But the starting point in a case where there has been an offer is that, prima facie, if the applicant receives no more or less than the offer made, she/he is at risk not only of not being awarded costs, but also of paying the costs of the other party after communication of the offer and a reasonable time to consider it. That seems clear from the decided cases and is in accord with the Supreme Court and County Court Rules requiring the court to have regard to the offer. I cannot, for my part, see why there is any difference in principle between the position of a party who fails to obtain an order equal to the offer made and pays the costs, and a party who fails by the offer to meet the award made by the court. In the latter case prima facie costs should follow the event, as they would do in a payment into court, with the proviso that other factors in the Family Division may alter that prima facie position."
Family Proceedings Rules 1991
"2.69 Offers to settle
(1) Either party to the application may at any time make a written offer to the other party which is expressed to be "without prejudice except as to costs" and which relates to any issue in the proceedings relating to the application.
(2) Where an offer is made under paragraph (1), the fact that such an offer has been made shall not be communicated to the court, except in accordance with rule 2.61E(3), until the question of costs falls to be decided.
2.69B Judgment or order more advantageous than an offer made by the other party
(1) This rule applies where the judgment or order in favour of the applicant or respondent is more advantageous to him than an offer made under rule 2.69(1) by the other party.
(2)
The court must, unless it considers it unjust to do so, order that other party to pay any costs incurred after the date beginning 28 days after the offer was made.
2.69C (revoked)
2.69D Factors for court's consideration under rules 2.69B
(1) In considering whether it would be unjust, or whether it would be just, to make the order referred to in rule 2.69B, the court must take into account all the circumstances of the case, including—
(a) the terms of any offers made under rule 2.69(1);
(b) the stage in the proceedings when any offer was made;
(c) the information available to the parties at the time when the offer was made;
(d) the conduct of the parties with regard to the giving or refusing to give information for the purposes of enabling the offer to be made or evaluated; and
(e) the respective means of the parties."
"Thus we are left only with r 2.69B which appears to contemplate the position where one party alone has made a Calderbank offer. Where the position is (as here) that each party has made such an offer, the rule becomes unworkable. I agree with Mr Marks' submission that:
'The surviving r 2.69B is incomprehensible. It is impossible to divine what the draftsman had in mind. Very often in a case such as this the order ends up between the offers—in which case, under the rule, both parties pay "the costs".' "
"85. It is very easy to see why in an era where the wife's claim was perceived to be against the husband's money for a sum necessary to meet her reasonable requirements, costs should, prima facie, follow the event. Her position was comparable to that of an ordinary civil claimant. It is much more difficult to apply the analogy in the post-White v White era where the court's function is (per Thorpe LJ in Cowan v Cowan [2001] 2 FCR 331 at [70], [2002] Fam 97 at [70]) to determine the parties 'unascertained shares' in the pool of assets that is the fruit of the marital partnership.
86. In this case I have ascertained W's share in this pool to be 40% and H's to be 60%. In such circumstances what is the event that the costs are supposed to follow? It is an intellectual concept with which I find it hard to grapple. … This is a submission that is often made: '… the wife has had to come to court to get her money.' But surely the husband has equally had to come to court to get his? Each party has had to come to the court to obtain an order which fairly disposes of the issues between them."
"92. In my judgment, a safer starting point nowadays in a big money case, where the assets exceed the aggregate of the parties' needs, is that there should be no order as to costs. That starting point should be readily departed from where unreasonableness by one or other party is demonstrated. This approach is I believe consistent with the spirit of the judgment of Butler-Sloss LJ in Gojkovic v Gojkovic when due allowance is made for the seismic shift in the law since that decision was given. It reflects the terms of CPR 44.3(5). It also reflects the disapplication by r 10.27(1)(b) of the 1991 rules of the general rule within CPR 44.3(2) of the unsuccessful party paying the costs of the successful party.
93. It may also reduce the extent of satellite costs assessment litigation, which itself can be protracted and acrimonious, and which prolongs the agony between the parties."
"Family proceedings arise out of the breakdown of a marriage, which may be seen as a misfortune falling on both parties. The fact that the court has to assist the parties to re-adjust their finances should not of itself imply blame on the part of either party. … As Mr Mostyn QC points out at para 86 of his judgment [in GW v RW], it may often be that 'each party has had to come to the court to obtain an order which fairly disposes of the issues between them."
"As you know we took over the assessment of costs in family proceedings comparatively recently. Large numbers of bills are payable out of the CLS Fund and, because of the rigorous funding regime, are comparatively modest. Where a party obtains an order that the costs be paid by the other spouse (usually the husband) any costs recovered go to reduce the statutory charge on property recovered or preserved (usually a share of the matrimonial home). In such cases solicitors have a vested interest in maximising the costs recoverable from a paying party because those costs are recoverable at commercial rates. The effect of this is twofold, the detailed assessment proceedings are very hard fought, and, perhaps more importantly, the underlying family proceedings may be pursued with unnecessary extra vigour to ensure an adequate return for the legal representatives.
Whereas in non-family civil proceedings the resolution of the substantive dispute frequently takes the heat out of any animosity between the parties, and enables settlement of the costs to be achieved in a significant number of cases, in family proceedings that animosity, which is in any event likely to be at a very high level, continues unabated during the assessment proceedings. The successful spouse on one side vows to bleed the other dry of every penny if at all possible, whilst the paying spouse goes out of his or her way to deny the other the possibility of any recovery. The number of settlements in assessments arising out of family proceedings is very low. This in turn means that the assessment hearings themselves last for longer than similar assessments in non family proceedings. Where a party is LSC funded the cost of the assessment proceedings is not added to the statutory charge and is therefore borne by the CLS Fund…….
The purpose of this letter is to suggest that it may be worth giving serious thought to doing away with fee shifting in family proceedings. The Family Proceedings (Miscellaneous Amendment) Rules 1991 disapply CPR 44.3(2) (costs follow the event). It is therefore a relatively short step to providing that in family proceedings no order for costs will be made unless a particular party has behaved in such an unreasonable manner that the court feels that a sanction should be imposed. I would suggest that if this idea were to be adopted the court making such an order should decide what amount should be paid by way of costs there and then.
The level of venom in detailed assessment in family proceedings is such that I am firmly of the view that the removal of costs as an area of conflict would have an overall beneficial effect. If costs were never in issue the heat would be taken out of the situation far more quickly and any incentive to legal representatives to pursue remedies over vigorously in the hope of recovering greater costs would also disappear."
Haskins v Haskins
"A stark fact which immediately jumps from the relevant documentation is that, in comparison with the order which actually I am going to make today and which is flagged in the main judgment, the husband has never made a sufficient offer at any stage; and that proposition applies by a wide, not a narrow, margin. So, pursuant to conventional, one could almost say axiomatic, principle (and I have in mind in particular such decisions as Gojkovic v Gojkovic (No 2)) the husband being offeror, the wife offeree, and his offers in their entirety being well short of that which has been ordered, the wife is entitled in justice to her costs."
"It does not end there. Other points are made and need to be addressed. "
"… it was culpable of the wife not to seek to negotiate whilst accepting the point, as I say, that probably the dialogue would not have borne fruit had she done so."
" It is a question, obviously, of overview, taking the litigation as a whole over its several years, looking at the structure of this hearing; how it arose that it went forward to, not just one sitting in November 2001, but actually four hearings in all before this one, the second in March 2002, the third in October 2002 and a short one in January 2003; whether the husband is entirely responsible for that; whether there is some degree of (so to speak) common misfortune in terms of misestimate; whether it might have been different, in terms any rate of the costs being something less than they have proven to be, if the wife's evidence on liquidity in the autumn of 2001 had been presented earlier, as it should have been. I certainly do not propose to apportion arithmetical percentages as between these factors. I take an overview. It is clear to me the husband must pay the vast majority of the wife's costs. I do not propose to express a result which confers upon him the responsibility to pay the whole costs in respect of a given period and less than the whole costs in respect of some other period. In my estimation he should pay 85% of the wife's costs and all of those costs are to be assessed on the standard basis, if not agreed."
Norris v Norris
"I am with you (Mr Scott) on Mr Mostyn's first point, but I am against you on the second point to some extent. The wife will have her costs on the standard basis, but she will only receive 80 per cent of her standard costs to reflect the fact that she lost on a major issue."
Lord Justice Thorpe:
"I do not believe these rules say what we intended them to say."
"The Family Proceedings (Miscellaneous Amendment) Rules 1991 disapply CPR 44.3(2) (costs follow the event). It is therefore a relatively short step to providing that in family proceedings no orders for costs will be made unless a particular party has behaved in such an unreasonable manner that the court feels that a sanction should be imposed. I would suggest that if this idea were to be adopted the court making such an order should decide what amount should be paid by way of costs there and then."
Lord Justice Mantell: