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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Walker & Ors v Burton & Anor [2013] EWHC 811 (Ch) (19 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/811.html Cite as: [2013] 3 Costs LR 469, [2013] EWHC 811 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
On Appeal from the Adjudicator to HM Land Registry
The Rolls Building, London |
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B e f o r e :
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Eric Charles Walker (1) Carole Ann Scott (2) Christopher Balchin (3) |
Appellants (Case 0394) |
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- and - |
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Peter Charles Burton (1) Susan Anne Burton (formerly Bamford) (2) |
Respondents (Case 0394) |
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And Between: |
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Peter Charles Burton (1) Susan Anne Burton (formerly Bamford) (2) |
Appellants (Case 0424) |
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- and - |
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Eric Charles Walker (1) Angela Walker (2) Carole Ann Scott (3) The estate of Elizabeth Chamberlin (represented by Carole Ann Scott) (4) Edward Mills (5) Christopher Balchin (6) |
Respondents (Case 0424) |
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CA Scott
Jeffrey Littman (Direct Access) for PC and SA Burton
Hearing dates: 27-28 February 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ David Cooke:
Background
"Only Ms Scott, Mr Walker and Mr Balchin were asked to sign the [CFA] agreement. The reason for this was that it was clear by this stage that it was those three clients who were the funders for the action. However their funding was for us to represent them in their case which was a joint case with the other [villagers], none of whom however had the funds to contribute directly themselves... None of the [villagers] ever had cases that were separate or severable from the others so it was natural we should be on the record for all of them and all documents and submissions were joint."
Apportionment
"The Bill is not a bill for the costs of the six respondents in the reference. It is for the costs of at most three of them. The other three were either persons whom Blakemores had no authority to represent or who were being represented free of charge yet were receiving the benefit of the work of Miss Scott and perhaps of Mr Walker and Mr Balchin. There can be no question of a joint retainer by all six. Ellingsen v Det Scandinaviske Compani [1919] 2 KB 567 applies, apportionment should take place and the paying parties are liable for only a moiety of the costs in the Bill at most"
" Mr Littman: ... we are helped by [hearing] what my friend's case is because he said yesterday that he is relying on the CFA with its strange, retrospective provisions, as having given rise to 2 retainers in a single document.
... What he meant was that the two retainers to which it gave rise were a pre 27 April 2009 retainer under which the costs of Mr Walker, Miss Scott and Mr Balchin were ... £195, or [later]
£225 if they lose and £300 if they win, and a second post 27 April 2009 retainer under which their costs would be £300 ... plus 100% if they win...
What about Mrs Walker, Miss Chamberlain and Mr [Mills]?
There has got to be a third retainer, unless there is no retainer at all, which remains one of my possibilities... that must be the third retainer which was in existence and which as far as one can tell would have remained untouched by the CFA coming into existence on [27] April 2009.
... Then there are three retainers, two of which, because they concerned exactly the same body of clients, may be contained in one [agreement] but the third of which unfortunately cannot ... one just does not know what work was covered by it and other items there might be in it.
The Judge: ... I can exclude all the costs relating to Mrs Walker and Mr Mills and Mrs Chamberlain and let them produce their own bills. I mean they have got all of the costs in their favour.
Mr Littman: yes. That would bring us on to the apportionment [issue] ... you have more or less made the argument for me on that one...
The Judge [to Dr Friston]: how do you come to act for Walker Mills and Chamberlain?
Dr Friston: ... this is a conditional fee agreement which, as I say, [creates] two separate retainers and you can see that there are only four [named] parties, the solicitors, Mr Scott, Mr Walker and Mr Balchin. In those circumstances those are the people who are able to [recover] costs under this agreement.
There is a retainer, if that is the correct word, with the other three, but that retainer, as things turned out, is a [nil] retainer.
It is a retainer under which no costs have been charged...
The Judge: So this bill does not cover Mr Walker Mr Mills and Mrs Chamberlain?
Dr Friston: Yes that is correct... the work has been done for all six clients.
The Judge: Well, then that when we come to the detailed assessment we will exclude those costs that relate to... for example the brief fee of Mr Stafford you [Mr Littman] will no doubt argue that it should be half for the existing clients and half for the [other three]
Mr Littman: That is precisely what I intend to argue, yes.
Dr Friston: But that would be the apportionment point ... I would like the court please to make a ruling as to the principle of apportionment, because I say that [it] is not the case that any costs which are in any way common to the parties are to be apportioned...
The Judge: I do not think I can give you one because I think the answer lies ... in each actual item. We cannot just divide the costs in half [and adopt a] simplistic approach, six clients, only charge for three. You have to examine each item of work and see the value of it to 3 clients compared to the value of it to 6 clients, and I suspect it you will argue on the brief fee that whether Mr Stafford was appearing three clients or six clients the fees are the same... "
At this point, the adjudicator had not heard any argument from Dr Friston as to why he said it was wrong in principle to apportion costs between the CFA clients and the non-CFA clients. He appears to be proceeding on the basis that in principle an apportionment is required, but says that it would not automatically be a 50-50 apportionment simply because there were two groups of three clients each. One of Dr Friston's complaints is that when the adjudicator came to make the apportionment he did in fact apply a 50-50 division without regard to any matter other than that only three of the six clients were liable for the costs.
" the fact that three of the group of six peel off and have a separate CFA does not mean there is a new retainer for the other three. Where does that come from? They initially instructed Blakemores... and they by implication are liable for either a quantum meruit or for a sum which Mr Baxendale in his witness statement says was his charging rate of £300 an hour. "
Mr Littman also seemed to be hedging his bets in submitting that even if the non- CFA clients were not liable to pay the solicitors, half of the costs should be treated as theirs in any event. At p 314 he said
" [It] is a very important principle to bear in mind, that something that is equally for the benefit of six respondents has to be apportioned equally between them. They are in two groups, even though only one group will be paying. If the other group is being given a free ride then that half is going to be irrecoverable.
" The Judge: ... Dr Friston, I think you need to clarify precisely your clients' case in respect of the three defendants who are not a party to the CFA ... what is the professional position [in relation to those] clients?
Dr Friston: ... I should firstly clarify the language. I am going to use the phrase "contract of retainer" to refer to an agreement by which the solicitor's remuneration is governed but when I simply refer to "a retainer" I am referring simply to the professional relationship between the client and the solicitor.
There clearly was a retainer with all these people because Blakemores acted on their behalf. So to that extent they are clients. But in so far as contracts of retainer are concerned the position changed when the conditional fee agreement was made in that position is that there is a conditional fee agreement with some of them and there is no intention to charge for the work carried out for the others...
The Judge: so in respect of the three that are not parties to the CFA Blakemores are [charging] nothing?... Well how can they recover any costs of those three [under the] indemnity principle?
Dr Friston:... the argument that has been advanced... is simply logically flawed.... The authorities that you have been referred to... relate to the situation where you have... two or more items of costs and where there is a reason to allow one but not to allow another... Where that is the case then obviously you need to carry out an exercise of excluding the costs to which there is no entitlement and in those circumstances the starting point - and it is only a starting point, it has been referred to as being a rule of thumb... and subject to the facts and to what is fair and what is just - the starting point is [equal] apportionment... This is an entirely different circumstance... all apportionment is is a mechanism for excluding costs to which somebody is not entitled for whatever reason. Here what we have is my learned friend saying, well there must be some costs because quantum meruit or whatever. There must be some costs, and therefore there must be something that needs to be excluded. Therefore we must carry out the apportionment exercise [and] ... at the end one then says, look [these costs are] going to breach the indemnity principle and therefore they are going to be disallowed. Well that is just wrong in logic. You are trying to [approbate] and reprobate the same concept at the same time and you simply cannot do that...
The Judge: ... is the suggestion then that there is a [nil] retainer with three of six of the clients but that if they lost all six would stump up [if] there was an order against you jointly that all six of you pay the [other side's] costs [?] You say the agreement is... the solicitor is not going to charge you anything, but if you lose you are going to have to share the costs with the three of them... In other words in the event of you losing the three who have not signed a CFA have to pay 50% of the successful party's costs.
Dr Friston: Yes...
The Judge: [You] suggest that three... respondents, covered by the CFA under which they would not have to pay anything agreed with the three that are vulnerable that the three that were vulnerable would stump up half the other side's costs? It is just ... I mean, it is beyond belief. It is absolutely beyond belief, Dr Friston. I mean, to suggest that the solicitor who is acting for six [clients] and in the event of them losing three would pay up and three would get the benefit of the conditional fee agreement. It is something that without evidence I entirely reject as being incredible...
Dr Friston: Well, Master, I think we are being at cross purposes... They would all be liable for the other side's costs. The CFA provides no protection at all.
The Judge: There is no [adverse costs insurance]?
Dr Friston: No. The CFA is a CFA.
The Judge: So if they lost those who instruct you would look to all 6 to pay?
Dr Friston: ... I think we are at cross purposes. Are we talking at the moment about adverse costs? ... The successful party would have looked to ... all six ...
The Judge: Even though only three of them signed the CFA ...?
Dr Friston: The CFA is simply the mechanism by which funding of one's own costs [is provided]. There is no bearing at all on [adverse costs].
The Judge: [That is something] which I also find [incredible]. What you are saying is that [three of them get] for want of a better word, a free ride?
Dr Friston: ... There is nothing remotely wrong with that...
The Judge: Where is the evidence about the retainer for the other three and, coupled with that, where is the evidence and documentation of the extent to which those instructing you advised the three not covered, or all six if you like, of the consequences of losing?
Dr Friston: Right. Insofar as the latter I am sure we can find something if you would like to see it, but I say it is profoundly irrelevant. It has no bearing at all on the indemnity principle ...
The Judge: Well it may not have relevance on the indemnity principle, but I have got serious doubts about those instructing you's (sic) evidence. I mean they put forward a [bill] that is totally incorrect. I mean, they have made a statement saying that these [respondents] were covered by a CFA. It now transpires on day two of the hearing that only three of them are covered by a CFA. You seek to rely on a deputy adjudicator's order about joint orders as to costs when he was completely in the dark about who was acting for whom. I mean, if the deputy adjudicator had these facts brought to his attention at the time at which the costs order was made what order would have made? I do not know. What I do know is that the bill [is wrong] and it needs to be corrected, and what you need to do is to set out in the bill exactly your clients retainer position and I do not understand it.
Dr Friston: Well, I have explained the retainer position...
The Judge: Not in respect of the first three, the three not covered... Where is the correspondence, the retainer agreements, between those three and your instructing solicitors?
Dr Friston: the position as I am advancing it is that there are no costs being claimed in respect of them, so in those circumstances I do not fully understand exactly what it is the court wants...
The Judge: Well that cannot be right because the bill does not say that... I think we are going to adjourn [for lunch]... Dr Friston let me put the position perfectly frankly to you so that you understand it. I cannot at the moment follow how three out of six of these clients can take advantage of a costs order made in favour of six of them. Now you say the answer to that is that they are not asking for any costs but that is really not a good enough answer... if the answer after the lunch hour adjournment is that this is only a bill for three of them then that may have different consequences. These are all of the costs. These are all of the costs. There are not going to be more bills for the other three. These are all the costs and [I must apply] Chadwick LJ's checklist [from Baylis v Kelly]...
[after the adjournment] Dr Friston, I do want to [ascertain] the position of the three non-CFA clients... What is your position on them? Is there a retainer?
Dr Friston: ... there is a retainer, using the phraseology I used earlier on, in that there were instructions, but there was no contract of retainer. So in other words there was no contract under which monies would be payable for the provision of legal services... I will refer to that... as being a nil retainer, ...
The Judge: Right, well I think you had better spell out exactly what the nil retainer consisted of by reference to the documentation that you have.
Dr Friston: Yes. The nil retainer is the absence of a contract. There is no contract at all for the payment of any monies of any sort and in those circumstances obviously there is nothing that I can put forward to prove that point...
The Judge: So these are three people that were joined in this adjudication process without their consent or with their consent?... Are they clients?
Dr Friston: Yes, they are clients. ...
The Judge: ... in June 2008 they became clients... But on what terms? I mean, monthly payment, no payment?
Dr Friston: On terms that there was no payment. So there was never any attempt to enter into a contract of retainer with them,...
The Judge: Were any of them under an obligation to pay?
Dr Friston: The CFA people, yes.
The Judge: Well, that is by virtue of the retrospective operation of the agreement. But at the time this was happening it was not covered by the CFA.
Dr Friston: At the time this was happening the non-CFA people were not being invoiced whereas... the other three were...
The Judge: So basically what we have got is these three clients that there is no letter of engagement and they were never charged anything?
Dr Friston: Well there was no contract of retainer. There was no contract by which they would be required to pay.
The Judge: Were they warned that if they lost the case... they would be liable for the other side's costs?
Dr Friston: Yes they were...
The Judge: How can they be clients if they are not paying?
How can you [have] a solicitor acting for somebody when he has got no retainer? I just do not understand the concept. How can you have a concept of a solicitor acting without a retainer?
Dr Friston: Well, there is no contract whereby all [would be liable to pay]. It is important to distinguish between that which relates to costs and that which relates to professional practice.
... A client is able to instruct a solicitor on [a] basis, which can range from entering an entirely informal basis without any agreement as to payment [and it is still an] instruction [that makes him a] client, through to a conditional fee agreement. ...
But Sir, this court is not concerned with the [client relationship]. It is not concerned with authority to act or anything of that nature.
The Judge: No, what this court is concerned with is ... on what basis these three clients retained those instructing you. I must say, Dr Friston, I have never heard the proposition of a solicitor acting but he has not got a retainer. I mean, I just cannot grasp the concept. I do not understand the concept.
Dr Friston: Well, I have said all I can, sir ...
The Judge: ... I have not got one shred of evidence that these clients did not think they were going to have to pay costs. I mean, a non-fee paying... what is the definition of client? I mean, the client must be somebody who goes to a solicitor for advice and pays him, whether it is a pro bono way of paying him or whether... Where is the evidence that under no circumstances would these clients ever have to pay?
[Y]ou gave no indication in [the notice of funding] that it was only a partial conditional fee agreement, that it was only three out of six and the other three were funding their own.
Dr Friston: That is the point. They are not funding their own.
That is the whole point. "
" I take objection to the description of my clients' position as seeking to obtain a windfall arising out of a purely technical point. On the contrary it is unjust to make a paying party, especially in the circumstances where there is a CFA, pay for costs which are not actually due to the solicitors whose bill has been put in. "
" I have to decide a difficult question of apportionment... as to whether there should be a division of these costs between the ... CFA clients and the non-CFA clients. Dr Friston with great ingenuity sought to persuade me that the rule in Baylis v Kelly ... does not apply because there was no actual retainer between the solicitor and the three nonpayers. He says that if I look through the bill I will also find that no claim was made in respect of those three nonpayers.
It seems to me that this has not been borne out. There is clearly a retainer existing between all of the clients paying and nonpaying and if one wanted an example of that one only had to look at the letter of 19 August 2008 in which ...[Blakemores] make it perfectly clear that all are jointly and severally liable. That being all six ...
If there is a suggestion that this was a no retainer position in respect of three and a retainer position in respect of the other three I would have expected to see a full and frank witness statement supported with the appropriate documentation setting out Dr Friston's case. I do not have it. There is an obligation on the receiving party that if they wish to maintain such a position they must [deploy] the appropriate evidence. There is absolutely none. All the evidence points the other way. It points to an agreement between the six of them which was then turned into a conditional fee agreement between the three of them for reasons that we were not told the court has been left completely in the dark as to why the position went from 6 to 3. The court can only draw adverse conclusions from that of evidence.
... This is a straightforward case where the solicitor has acted for a number of defendants to the same action on separate retainers. A retainer for three of them being the retrospective and prospective retainer of the CFA. The other retainer- I have yet to be addressed on the exact nature of the other retainer but it is clear there is another retainer.
There is an alternative [argument] by Dr Friston, which I also [reject] which is there is no claim by the nonpaying clients. That is an extremely late point. It is a point that I'm sure takes both me and those paying by surprise. It seems to me that it is impossible that it is a point that will succeed on detailed examination. On detailed examination it cannot be, for example, where there are instructions to counsel on behalf of the six the three cannot be non-paying... clients. I reject it on the basis that I have no evidence that there is no claim in respect of the nonpaying clients.
Finally, if I may say this, I do not understand the concept of nonpaying clients. I understand the concept of pro bono work and I also understand the concept of conditional fee agreements I do not understand the concept of a retainer for a client on a nonpaying basis which is then put together with paying clients and the nonpaying clients are allowed to ride on the back of paying clients without being liable for any of the solicitors costs. I'm not saying it is not a possible arrangement. It is probably a possible arrangement [although] bizarre. ... If a nonpaying client is to be added to proceedings [costing] as in this case £800,000 one would have expected very careful letters of explanation from the solicitors to the nonpaying client setting out precisely how this scheme worked. Like so many things in this case in the absence of such evidence I reject the submission that these are, if there be such a creature, a nonpaying client. "
"1. A group of villagers found that enjoyment of their village threatened by persons who (wrongly) asserted rights over property that was intimately close to their homes. After having represented themselves for a period of time, solicitors were instructed. Three of them assumed responsibility to those fees and three did not. The exact way in which this came about as a matter for them, but the result was that the conditional fee agreement was made with those who assumed responsibility for fees, and no contract of retainer at all was made with the others (that being, at least, their belief). By this stage there was no intention to charge the nonpaying villagers: this fact has been repeatedly and clearly stated by counsel acting on instructions.
No one was deceived: the conditional fee agreement stated on its face the names of the persons who would pay and, by implication, those that would not pay...
2. Things, apparently, are not as simple as this, however. According to this court, there is no such thing as a non-fee paying client. This court does "not understand" that concept. This court has found that there is a contract of retainer and that the assertions made (through counsel) by a solicitor of the Senior Court that he had not entered into any contract of retainer and that he did not seek payment are to be disbelieved. Apparently, evidence is required of the fact that the solicitors did not seek payment...
5. The Respondents can do no more than express astonishment at the cul-de-sac into which the court has backed itself..
" Thank you both for your skeletons. I have read both of them and in my judgment there was clearly no retainer for the non- CFA clients. It was a matter that I have been trying to flush out from Mr Baxendale some days now and I thought it was only appropriate that I gave Mr Baxendale an opportunity of reflecting on his position because the effect of only acting for three of the six can be Draconian. I received those arguments on both sides, for which many thanks, and quite simply there was no fee agreement with the non-CFA clients.
I need to correct one misapprehension in Dr Friston's skeleton at paragraph 2. I said I did not understand the concept. I just want to be perfectly clear. The concept that I do not understand is that a non-fee paying client is able to recover his costs in breach of the indemnity principle. That is what I do not understand and, indeed, Dr Friston in paragraph 6 says I will have to make findings about something that does not exist. Of course, I am not going to do that. It is perfectly clear from the skeletons that there is no contract of retainer that incurs (sic) the three of the six in fees and they are unable to recover any fees in this assessment from Mr Burton. "
" Dr Friston: That then invites the obvious question as to what the effect of that is because you will recall -
The Judge: The effect of it is that there will be an apportionment. I do not know what it is because we cannot get to the assessment because we keep dealing with these preliminary points.
Dr Friston: Master, well, if the apportionment is going to be anything other than 100%, that is a finding that is internally inconsistent because I drew a distinction in my submissions between the client and having a retainer. You will recall ... that I said that the apportionment must be [on a] retainer basis about costs, rather than about clients, and my learned friend when he responded said... it was not asserted that it was just simply going to be an apportionment between the clients. This court has now correctly found that there is no retainer. In those circumstances there should be no apportionment.
The judge: That is absolute nonsense, Dr Friston. We cannot have litigation in which various nonpaying clients hang onto the back of paying clients and then at the end of it say, "I have had a free ride. I do not want any of my costs"... There will be an apportionment. The apportionment may be 50%, it may be less..."
" Mr Baxendale: So, Master, may I seek clarification? Is that on the basis that the apportionment is per retainer or per client?
The Judge: It does not matter.
Mr Baxendale: Master, it matters a great deal.
The Judge: It is three and three. What is the difference?
Mr Baxendale: The difference is that there is a distinction between a client and a retainer and you have made a finding of fact that there is no retainer, so it makes a huge difference.
The Judge: ... I cannot see the difference ... so I am going to reduce it by 50%. "
i) What costs has the receiving party in fact incurred? These consist of amounts he has actually paid, and amounts for which he is liable to his solicitor (and perhaps others such as counsel). This sets a maximum amount that the paying party may be required to pay (at least so long as the indemnity principle applies).
ii) Separately, what part of those costs is the paying party required to pay? This may be less than the full costs incurred for many reasons it is not necessary to seek to set out comprehensively, but familiar grounds for disallowance of costs include those that are found on the assessment to be excessive, disproportionate or unreasonably incurred. The costs claimed in this case were held to be disproportionate and substantially reduced on assessment for many reasons not related to the number of claimants, none of which is challenged on this appeal.
"A [legal aid] taxation ... is a taxation ... of a solicitor's bill to his own client (the assisted person) where that Bill is to be paid out of the legal aid fund ... Accordingly, the amount to be allowed to the solicitor on a legal aid taxation ... is the amount ... for which the client would be liable to the solicitor if the client were not an assisted person.
Where a solicitor acts for a number of defendants in the same proceedings liability of each client to the solicitor in respect of those proceedings must depend, first, on the nature of the retainer which the solicitor has from the client. The position was explained by the Court of Appeal in Ellingsen v Det Scandinaviske Compani and others [1919] 2KB 567 at 569:
"if there has been a joint contract between the solicitor and his clients, each client is liable for the whole costs, and if they were separate contracts, each will be liable for his own portion of them; and as pointed out by Amphlett B in [Burridge v Bellew (1875) 32 IT 807 at 813] the fact that after separate retainers the defence is conducted jointly does not make the liability joint."
The Court of Appeal had previously remitted the matter to the taxing Master to report on the nature of the retainer in that case ... On the matter coming back before then, the court proceeded on the basis that the findings established two separate retainers. The court concluded that, on that basis, it was clear on the authorities that each client was liable to the solicitors for half only of the cost of the joint items of defence, together with the whole costs of any separate items of defence.
In reaching that conclusion the court relied on the decision of the Court of Appeal in Chancery in In re Colquhoun (1854) De G M & G 35. The practice of the Court of Chancery at that time was stated in the certificate given by the taxing Master in that case. He certified that the principles applicable to costs as between several defendants employing one solicitor and the other parties in the suit (which he regarded as free from doubt) where applicable, also, to dealings between the solicitor and his clients. The certificate went on in these terms:
"5. But, nevertheless, the extent of that liability of the client may vary according to the circumstances of each case; in other words, according to the retainer of the solicitor of the court.
6. Thus each defendant may, on his own retainer, be liable separately for his own costs only; or all or several may be liable jointly, or one may have made himself liable for his own defence, and also that of one or more of his co- defendant.
7. The solicitor is, however, as I conceive, bound to keep and deliver his accounts with reference both to this liability and to the practice of the court.
8. If, therefore, the liability owed is a several, not a joint, liability, he is to charge against the client all the work he does for him separately and his proportion of the general charges which are applicable to him and others.
9. If, however, the liability be joint the solicitor makes out one joint bill against all the clients, and whether he sues in the law, or proceeds against them in this court under the statute, his proceedings must, I apprehend, be against them jointly."
.....
In my view the position, as it appears from the authorities, may be stated as follows:
(i) where a solicitor acts for a number of defendants to the same action on separate retainers, each client is entitled to have a separate bill, and have that Bill taxed as between himself and the solicitor;
(ii) in taxing that Bill the court is to have regard to the overriding principle that the client is to be charged only with the costs properly attributable to the conduct of his defence;
(iii) any costs relating solely to the defence of one client should be charged to him, to the exclusion of the other clients; ...
(v) the general costs of the action - that is to say costs which cannot be attributed to a particular client (or clients) on the basis of separate defences or distinct issues - must be apportioned pro rata; and
(vi) it is irrelevant that the effect of an apportionment may be that the solicitor cannot recover some part of the apportioned costs - because, for example, one or more clients are insolvent.
... Different questions may arise where the solicitor acts on a joint retainer..."
"This judgment purports to be based on the decision of the Lords Justices in In re Colquhoun which in its turn is based on the elaborate certificate of Master Follett on the well- established practice of taxation, which the Lords Justices say may be open to some objections, but is too well established to be disturbed by decisions. The certificate states the practice between party and party thus (head 3): "If one solicitor appears for three defendants, and the bill is dismissed with costs as to one of them, the plaintiff can only be compelled to pay the costs of such proceedings as exclusively relate to that defendant, and one-third of the costs of the proceedings taken jointly for all three defendants.""
He concluded:
"While the principle involved may perhaps in some cases have curious results, it appears to be too well established to be disturbed by decisions of this Court."
"This rule, a rule of thumb, is, no doubt, convenient in an ordinary case, but I do not think it can be said that it must be applied in every case. Regard must be had to the nature of the case and to the nature of the defences raised to the claim. In the present case, there were three separate defences on the file, though at the trial the defendants were represented by the same solicitors and counsel. The main contest was between the plaintiff and the second defendant. That entailed a lengthy inquiry as to what was the agreement, and in regard to the questions raised by paras 9 to 14 of the defence of the second defendant, in which defences of estoppel, waiver and the like were raised. Neither the defendant company nor any of the other successful defendants raised these matters. Their defences were, as counsel put it, more of a stone-wall in character. Yet, if the claim of the successful defendants is right, they will be each entitled to one-eighth of the fee allowed for instructions for brief and one-eighth of counsel's fees, though they did not raise the matters I have mentioned and though the plaintiff succeeded on them against the defendant who did raise them. This cannot be right. It is not disputed that it would result in injustice against the plaintiff. I do not know of any authority which compels the court to follow the rule in every class of case, even if to follow it would result in injustice. To do so would be to fly in the teeth of the generally accepted principle, as stated ([1919] 2 KB 569) in Ellingsen's case, "that the successful party is to be recompensed the liability he has reasonably incurred in defending himself'."
"Apart from the pre-CFA client issue which Dr Friston is going to try and assist us with over the adjournment is there anything else that either party wants and I need to give a ruling on?"
The success fee: Recoverability in principle
"58 Conditional fee agreements
(1) A conditional fee agreement which satisfies all of the conditions applicable to it by virtue of this section shall not be unenforceable by reason only of its being a conditional fee agreement; but (subject to subsection (5)) any other conditional fee agreement shall be unenforceable.
(2) For the purposes of this section and section 58A—
(a) a conditional fee agreement is an agreement with a person providing advocacy or litigation services which provides for his fees and expenses, or any part of them, to be payable only in specified circumstances; and(b) a conditional fee agreement provides for a success fee if it provides for the amount of any fees to which it applies to be increased, in specified circumstances, above the amount which would be payable if it were not payable only in specified circumstances ...
58A Conditional fee agreements: supplementary
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(6) A costs order made in any proceedings may, subject in the case of court proceedings to rules of court, include provision requiring the payment of any fees payable under a conditional fee agreement which includes a success fee.
(7) Rules of Court may make provision with respect to the assessment of any costs which include fees payable under a conditional fee agreement."
"Where the court makes an order for costs and the receiving party has entered into a funding arrangement as defined in Rule 43.2 [ie a conditional fee agreement] the costs payable by the paying party include any additional liability... unless the court orders otherwise."
This he argues is a deeming provision, having the effect that a costs order is deemed to include an order for payment of additional liabilities unless it expressly provides otherwise.
"Further, so far as jurisdiction is concerned section 58[A](6) of the 1990 Act provides that a costs order made in any proceedings may...include provision requiring the payment of any fees payable under a conditional fee agreement which provides for payment of a success fee. Thus the starting point is that success fees are recoverable in principle unless a specific procedural rule displaces this prima facie entitlement."
" The fact that some tribunals have made the rules does not mean that others who have not cannot have CFAs in their jurisdiction, and the fact that there is no enabling mechanism does not, in my judgment, deprive this tribunal of the capacity to award conditional fees. Parliament has introduced this legislation in the broadest terms, and, in my judgment, the CFA applied in this jurisdiction and (if necessary) I adopt the reasoning of the Learned Deputy Adjudicator Dray in the case to which I have been referred. "
The success fee: Quantification
"1. The lack of documentation before 1800.
2. The existence of court reports from the 1500s and documents from 1598.
3. The fact that it appears that for many years parties behaved on the basis that a Lordship existed.
4. The possibility of a Crown Grant.
5. The difficulty of the law on many points.
6. The possibility of a Prescriptive Grant. "
"... once you exclude the riskiest risk in litigation you then have to have a look at the other risks. I have listened carefully to both sides' submissions, and I accept that if this matter is to go further it may well be that a much more intense look will need to be taken as to the exact position on the day that the CFA was entered into.
However, on the basis of the submissions that I have received, and also on the basis that before the CFA was entered into the litigants in person had expended some 700 hours on this matter, and Blakemores had also spent something approaching 100 to 150 hours on this matter, I cannot accept that by 27th April
2008 all these issues were at the risk of 100%. However, I have to balance that with the fact that this case took 10 days to hear. Even if one excludes two days of it for the ownership of the Fell, the Freehold title ownership, and also maybe some other time on dwelling on the Knights of St John, which may or may not have been relevant, it seems to me that a 100% success fee in a matter of this nature is too high. 40% has been offered. That is too low. I have set the success fee at 60%. "
"123. Of course, in order to arrive at an appropriate success fee, it is necessary to attribute quantitative risk assessments to the potential problems, and, at any rate at first sight, it appears sound logic in principle to multiply out those risk assessments in order to arrive at the overall risk. However, in the context of legal proceedings, such an approach is open to attack in principle, as may be appreciated from the rather compressed discussion in paras 23.5-9 in Chalk on Risk Assessment in Litigation (2001). Not only is the precision accorded to the prospects somewhat artificial, but the implicit assumption that each of the risks is entirely self-contained, or insulated from all the other risks, is plainly very questionable. Further, as Mance LJ recognised in Hanif v Middleweeks (unreported, 19 July 2000), para 41, a judge trying a case "might, even if only subconsciously, [be] predisposed towards a more favourable overall conclusion on the technical issues if and when he had concluded that the hurdle involved on the [substantive causation issue] could be overcome [by the claimant]"...
127. When it comes to determining the prospects of a claim succeeding, there is, for the sort of reasons just discussed, a risk of becoming beguiled by the apparent accuracy of an assessment which is expressed in figures and appears to be logically based. In the end, however, the determination is a matter of judgment, which involves arriving at an overall assessment by weighing up various factors, which are inherently difficult to quantify, not least because the quantification will be a matter of opinion on which reasonable people could differ (sometimes quite substantially), and because the factors are not as independent of each other as might first appear.
132. The question for the Judge when considering the reasonable figure or figures for uplift was ultimately a value judgment, based on his retrospective assessment of the risk of failure at the date the uplift was determined. Although the risk must be precisely quantified in order to arrive at a specific success fee, the exercise is inevitably one which involves the costs judge evaluating and weighing the various weaknesses and strengths of the claimants' case, and reviewing in particular the contemporaneous assessments. In this case, the Judge considered the various competing factors and evidence and arrived at a success fee varying between 100% and 47%, depending on when a claimant entered into a CFA, and on average 58%.
133. The role of this court, on an appeal from that assessment, is not whether we would have decided that a reasonable success fee was between 100% and 47%, averaging around 58%, but whether the Senior Costs Judge, when assessing that figure as a reasonable success fee, ignored or misunderstood relevant evidence, took irrelevant evidence into account, went wrong on any point of law, arithmetic or principle, or reached a conclusion which was plainly wrong. In the light of the factors I have identified and discussed, it seems to me that he committed none of these errors..."