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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> PGI Group Ltd v Thomas & Ors (Application for Permission to Appeal) [2022] EWCA Civ 233 (25 February 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/233.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 233, [2022] Costs LR 307 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
MR JUSTICE CAVANAGH
QB-2019-003882
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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PGI Group Limited |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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Magret Thomas & 30 Others |
Respondents |
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Benjamin Williams QC and Kate Boakes (instructed by Leigh Day Solicitors ) for the Respondents
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Hearing Date : 16 February 2022
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ON APPLICATION FOR PERMISSION TO APPEAL
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE COULSON :
Background Matters
The CCO Regime
"5) The court may at any stage of proceedings make a costs capping order against all or any of the parties, if –
(a) it is in the interests of justice to do so;
(b) there is a substantial risk that without such an order costs will be disproportionately incurred; and
(c) it is not satisfied that the risk in subparagraph (b) can be adequately controlled by –
(i) case management directions or orders made under this Part; and
(ii) detailed assessment of costs.
(6) In considering whether to exercise its discretion under this rule, the court will consider all the circumstances of the case, including –
(a) whether there is a substantial imbalance between the financial position of the parties;
(b) whether the costs of determining the amount of the cap are likely to be proportionate to the overall costs of the litigation;
(c) the stage which the proceedings have reached; and
(d) the costs which have been incurred to date and the future costs."
Accordingly, in order to obtain a CCO, sub-rule (5) requires the applicant to demonstrate that a CCO is a) in the interests of justice; and b) that there is a substantial risk that, without such an order, costs would be disproportionately incurred; and c) that the risk of costs being disproportionately incurred cannot be adequately controlled by costs budgeting.
The Proportionality Rules
The Judge's Judgment
12.1 The applicant estimates that the maximum damages that the 31 individual claimants will recover is likely to be around £10,000 each, or perhaps less, which was described by the judge as "modest by English standards" [13]. However, whilst those sums might be modest, the judge subsequently pointed out that they "are very significant for poor Malawian plantation workers, and they may indeed by life-changing" [79].
12.2 The claims are about much more than money: the claimants want to show that they were telling the truth; they want to restore their reputations; and they want to bring these and similar abuses to an end. The judge called these non-financial objectives "vindication" [13]. The judge plainly thought that the vindication aspect of these claims was very important. At [79] he said:
" …I am satisfied that the Claimants' legitimate desire for personal vindication, and for the acceptance by the Court that they were abused in the way that they allege and that the Defendant is liable for this treatment, coupled with a legitimate desire to use the court proceedings as a way of shining a light on these practices and promoting reforms in the future, mean that future costs that are substantially in excess of the damages at issue will not be disproportionately incurred. The importance of the matter to the parties is a relevant consideration, in relation to proportionality (see CPR 44.4(3)(c))."
12.3 It is accepted that the claims are arguable. There is no ground for striking out the claims [20]-[22].
12.4 If a CCO were made in the sum of £150,000, as the applicant seeks, then that would be likely to force the claimants to discontinue these proceedings [26]. In this way, the making of the CCO would stifle the claim.
12.5 In theory at least, the claimants could bring their claims against Lujeri, and the applicant, in Malawi [29].
14.1 Ground 1: The judge applied the wrong proportionality test;
14.2 Ground 2: The judge failed properly to take account of the costs already incurred in his analysis;
14.3 Ground 3: The judge was wrong to hold that the costs of prosecuting the claims in Malawi was irrelevant to proportionality.
The General Reasons for Refusing PTA
22.1 £150,000 was accepted by everyone as being nowhere near the minimum reasonable and necessary costs that the respondents would incur in pursuing their claims in the High Court from the date of the application to the end of the trial. It is less than a fifth of the sum which the judge calculated as the appropriate costs budget.
22.2 On its own evidence, the applicant will incur future costs of £1,750,000 to defend itself against these allegations up to trial. In other words, the applicant will spend more than 10 times the amount at which it wants the respondents' costs to be capped. Even allowing for the difference in the costs incurred by the parties to date, and the fact that the size of the applicant's own costs can never be the decisive factor in either CCOs or costs budgeting, such a stark difference might be said to perpetuate the substantial imbalance in the parties' financial positions, and give rise to a potentially grave inequality of arms going forward.
22.3 As the judge found, these are claims which are about much more than money. The vindication elements of the claim (including restoring reputations) are expressly identified in the proportionality rules as relevant factors. They cannot be over-emphasised in cases of this sort. Any attempt to calculate proportionality by way of some sort of cost/benefit analysis which concentrates on the level of damages only – an attitude which I consider informs the applicant's approach, despite Mr Bacon's pleas to the contrary – is not in accordance with the proportionality rules.
22.4 A CCO in the sum of £150,000 would inevitably bring an end to the claim. The making of such a CCO would therefore amount to the striking out of a valid claim by the back door. That would, in my judgment, be contrary to the overriding objective set out in r.1.1. The court would need exceptional reasons for taking such a course.
22.5 No authority was cited in which any court has ever made either a CCO or fixed a costs budget in a figure (£150,000) which was so much lower than the figure for future costs which the judge considered reasonable and necessary (£848,150).
The Three Substantive Grounds of Appeal
Ground 1
Ground 2
Ground 3
Summary