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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Connell v Mutch (t/a Southey Building Services) & Anor [2012] EWCA Civ 1589 (06 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1589.html Cite as: [2013] TCLR 1, [2012] EWCA Civ 1589, [2013] BLR 82, [2013] CP Rep 11 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT sitting at
LIVERPOOL COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Gore QC
9LV52085
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
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Andrew Connell |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Mutch t/a Southey Building Services & Anr |
Respondent |
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David Berkley QC (instructed by James Murray Solicitors) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 20 November 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
"As a matter of formality, however, the claim against the Defendant by the First Claimant is dismissed. There is judgment for the Second Claimant on the claim for £22,336.50 but there is judgment for the Defendant on the counterclaim for £9,600.41." (Paragraph 31.)
"1. The claim of the First Claimant is dismissed.
2. Judgment for the Second Claimant on the claim in the sum of £14,350.94 (being £12,736.09 plus $1,623.86 interest) net of set off.
3. Judgment for the Defendant on the Counterclaim against the Second Claimant.
4. The First Claimant pay the Defendant's costs of First Claimant's action against the Defendant, claim and counterclaim.
5. The Defendant pay the Second Claimant's costs of the Second Claimant's claim against the Defendant.
6. The Second Claimant pay the Defendant's costs of the Defendant's Counterclaim against the Second Claimant.
7. Costs to be the subject of detailed assessment on a standard basis if not agreed.
8. The Claimant's application for permission to appeal the costs order and the entry of judgment for the Defendant on the Counterclaim refused.
9. The sum ordered to be paid at paragraph 2 herein shall be paid by 4.00pm on the 10th February 2012."
"(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 . . ."
Sub-paragraph (b) then goes on to provide that "the court may make a different order". As Jackson LJ pointed out in Naseem v Kang [2011] EWCA Civ 737, yet another building dispute:-
"It is undoubtedly the case that the courts have adopted a more flexible approach to costs since the introduction of the Civil Procedure Rules than was formerly the case." (Paragraph 38)
". . . There was an awful lot of argument and evidence about the causes of the water ingress and about the, as I have characterised them, non-compliances, wants and defects in the workmanship and whether that necessitated reasonably the re-covering of the roof or would have been adequately dealt with simply by way of repair, and that has really been what has taken most of the time in this case. Some time has been taken, for the reasons that you allege, I accept that. What troubles me, despite my instinct, which is to penalise for disproportionality in this case because I really do not see why this case should have taken five days and effectively it has now, but at the moment I am not persuaded that those are points that demand a 44.3 adjustment as opposed to being points that you are still perfectly able to take on detailed assessment, including on matters of conduct, enable you to say the claimants' recovery of what Mr Bradley impliedly concedes to be an eye-watering sum of money in relation to costs is not justified, and you have got all of those points available to you on detailed assessment. That is why I stand back from this and look at it from the point of principle. I am with you that principle demands some form of recognition in the order that I make that, whereas the second claimant denied that he owned you any money at all and indeed sought to argue that you owed him money before one even got to the question of defective workmanship, you nonetheless have succeeded in establishing that he owned you a significant sum of money and I am persuaded at the moment that you have to have an opportunity to benefit from that issue-based finding, and it seems to me that the way in which to procure your ability to benefit from that is to say, despite the net outturn on Hanak v Green being a net judgment for the claimant for 12,000-odd, that the defendant nonetheless is entitled to the costs of the counterclaim, and you can argue on detailed assessment what those costs might be."
". . . The event in those circumstances in the light of Hanak v Green is that the judgment, and therefore, prima facie, 44.1, the costs follow it and the claimant (that is the second claimant) is entitled to the costs of the action. Subject to anything that Br Bradley may say, I am inclined to the view that the defendant nonetheless would remain entitled to the costs of the counterclaim because he has succeeded in establishing it in a contest, but, although it is a matter for argument at the detailed assessment, what commonly transpires in these cases is that much of the cost is really referable to the claim and not severably identifiable as referable to the counterclaim, and his success on the counterclaim costs is likely to be modest. It will include things like the pleading, the Part 20 formalities, but you cannot differentiate, for example, the global cost of the expert evidence and separate it as between claim and counterclaim. It would all have to have been incurred on the claim anyway, for which the report charges and there will be difficult points for the defendant in seeking to sever such items."
The trial judge has therefore given very considerable guidance to the costs judge as to the manner in which the assessment should be conducted. Mr Bradley expressed his concern that an attempt might be made at the assessment to suggest that the costs of the quantity surveyors were not recoverable as costs of the claim but recoverable only as costs of the counterclaim, but the judge appears to have foreclosed or at any rate attempted to foreclose that argument. He did not differentiate between the experts and I note from the substantive judgment that Mr Walter gave evidence in relation to both claim and counterclaim, and I have no reason to think that Mr Earl did not do likewise.
Lord Justice Davis :
Lord Justice Mummery :