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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Khaira & Ors v Shergill & Ors [2017] EWCA Civ 1687 (27 October 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1687.html Cite as: [2017] 5 Costs LR 953, [2017] WLR(D) 721, [2017] EWCA Civ 1687, [2018] 3 All ER 44, [2018] 1 WLR 175 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
MR RICHARD SPEARMAN QC (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
CH/2015/0478
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
____________________
MOHINDER SINGH KHAIRA & Others |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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DALJIT SINGH SHERGILL & Others |
Respondents |
____________________
Roger Mallalieu (instructed by Addlestone Keene) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 14 June 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS :
Introduction
Background
The Rules
"The general rule is that the costs of any proceedings or any part of the proceedings are not to be assessed by the detailed procedure until the conclusion of the proceedings, but the court may order them to be assessed immediately. (Practice Direction 47 gives further guidance about when proceedings are concluded for the purpose of this rule)."
"A party who is served with a notice of commencement (see paragraph 5.2 below) may apply to a costs judge or a District Judge to determine whether the party who served it is entitled to commence detailed assessment proceedings. On hearing such an application the orders which the court may make include: an order allowing the detailed assessment proceedings to continue, or an order setting aside the notice of commencement."
The proceedings below
Issue 1: The effect of CPR 47.1
"In my view, it is clear from these judgments (1) that cases which pre-dated the coming into force of the CPR treated, and were regarded by the Court of Appeal in that case as treating, the proceedings progressing towards trial on the one hand and an appeal on the other hand as separate proceedings for the purposes of costs and (2) that the Court of Appeal in that case considered that this separation or distinction between proceedings in different courts in the same litigation is still recognised and is written into the CPR, including and in particular in CPR 47.1 and in Practice Direction 47. Those conclusions are articulated most clearly, but not exclusively, in the passages in the judgment of Rix LJ which I have emphasised above."
"The starting point is that as a matter of ordinary language one would say that the proceedings were brought in support of a claim, and were not over until the courts had disposed of that claim one way or the other at whatever level of the judicial hierarchy. The word is synonymous with an action. In the cases cited above, relating to an awarding or assessment of costs, the ordinary meaning is displaced because a distinct order for costs must be made in respect of the trial and each subsequent appeal, and a separate assessment made of the costs specifically relating to each stage. They therefore fall to be treated for those purposes as separate proceedings. The present issue, however, turns on a different point. The question posed by section 46(3) of LASPO is whether the fact of having had an ATE policy relating to the trial before the commencement date is enough to entitle the insured to continue to use the 1999 costs regime for subsequent stages of the proceedings under top-up amendments made after that date. The fact that costs are separately awarded and assessed in relation to each stage does not assist in answering that question."
"It seems to me that the correct starting point is to look at the terms of the costs order made by the Court of Appeal. That was not an order for the immediate assessment of costs and the fact that it dealt with an application for permission from an order which did include a direction for immediate assessment, does not alter the terms of the Court of Appeal's own order. The Master approached the matter on the basis that the Court of Appeal's order brought to an end one aspect of the proceedings: i.e. the issue about the grant of the anti-suit injunction. This is also correct, but the purpose of CPR 47.1 is to lay down a general rule that the costs of part of the proceedings are not to be assessed until the conclusion of the proceedings as a whole unless the Court orders them to be assessed immediately, which the Court of Appeal did not. The order made by the Court of Appeal is therefore governed by this general rule and although it would have been open to the Court of Appeal to order an immediate assessment (see E.G. Morris v Bank of America [2000] 1 AER 954) it did not do so. Master Campbell's decision on this point effectively re-writes CPR 47.1 and cannot stand."
"I accept that the usual practice would be for a party to ask the Court of Appeal to order immediate assessment of costs if that is what it wishes to have done. I also accept that the claimants did not do so in this case and that, in those circumstances, the effect of the order is, in the light of CPR 47.1, that the costs as ordered by the Court of Appeal, as matters stand, will not be assessed until the conclusion of proceedings."
Issue 2: Did the costs judge have jurisdiction to order an immediate assessment?
"But the court may order them to be assessed immediately. In my judgment, that is an order which this court can make. This court has the conduct of the proceedings generally. It has before it a specific issue of whether it is appropriate for there to be an immediate assessment of costs. Those costs include as part of the costs of the proceedings the appeal costs. I am therefore satisfied that I do have jurisdiction to order immediate assessment of those costs and, because they are discrete costs and because they involve no great issue of disentanglement, I accept that it would be appropriate to order immediate assessment of the appeal costs."
"His alternative basis for allowing the detailed assessment to proceed is also in my judgment flawed. He gives no reasons at all for exercising his discretion in favour of the Claimants and ignores the fact that the Court of Appeal either was not asked to or did not choose to order an immediate assessment. That seems to me to be a strong factor against exercising the discretion in the way that Master Campbell did and his order will be set aside: I should also add (although this is not strictly necessary for my decision) that I am far from persuaded that s.28.1(4) in fact gives to the costs judge power to order the continuation of a detailed assessment in circumstances where the Court making the original order for costs has not done so. The power contained in s.28.1(4)(b) to allow the assessment to continue seems to me to be consequential and contingent upon the power contained in s.28.1(4)(a) for the costs judge to decide whether the party serving a notice of commencement is entitled to do so. The reference to being entitled to do so must be a reference to the terms of CPR 47.1 and calls for a judicial determination of whether under that rule the party in question is entitled to proceed. It would be odd for the costs judge to be entitled to allow the assessment to continue notwithstanding a ruling that CPR 47.1 did not justify an immediate assessment and I do not consider that s.28.1(4)(b) conferred on the costs judge any such dispensing power. The only Court entitled to permit a deviation from the general rule is the Court making the costs order. If that power is not exercised, the costs judge must apply the general rule."
"Where these Rules provide for the court to perform any act then, except where an enactment rule or practice direction provides otherwise, that act may be performed-
(a) in relation to proceedings in the High Court, by any judge, Master, Registrar in Bankruptcy or District Judge of that Court: and
(b) in relation to proceedings in the County Court, by any judge of the County Court."
Issue 3: The effect of the Order of the Supreme Court
"However, where, as has happened in the present case, the Supreme Court has made a single Order in relation to the costs in the Court of Appeal and the costs in the Supreme Court, I do not consider that Order can have the effect that the receiving party is entitled to proceed with immediate assessment of one lot of costs but not the other. Accordingly, in my judgment, the true meaning and effect of the Order made by the Supreme Court dated 28 July 2014 is that the Claimants are entitled to immediate detailed assessment of all of those costs."
Conclusion
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN:
LORD LLOYD-JONES: