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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Ralls Builders Ltd, Re [2016] EWHC 1812 (Ch) (20 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/1812.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1812 (Ch), [2016] WLR 5190, [2016] BCC 581, [2016] 1 WLR 5190, [2016] WLR(D) 409 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF RALLS BUILDERS LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 |
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(1) STEPHEN PAUL GRANT (2) JAMES RICHARD TICKELL (Joint Liquidators of Ralls Builders Limited) |
Applicants | |
(1) WILLIAM RALPH RALLS (2) NICHOLAS LEE RALLS (3) GARY CHRISTOPHER HAILSTONES |
Respondents |
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Mr. Christopher Boardman and Mr. Christopher Lloyd (instructed by Verisona Law) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 3-4 March 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE SNOWDEN :
The claim in respect of costs and expenses
£ | £ | £ | ||
Liquidation to [date] | Wilkins K | Portland | Total | % of total |
08.07.11 (pre-action letter of claim) | 30,571.00 | 5,163.00 | 35,734.00 | 14 |
19.01.12 (liquidation committee sanction) | 37,859.25 | 7,980.50 | 45,839.75 | 18 |
08.06.15 (start of trial) | 125,721.75 | 43,519.00 | 185,643.25* | 72 |
30 06.15 (end of trial) | 189,969.25 | 49,406.50 | 256,160.75* | 100 |
*The total includes £16,785.00 that was incurred by Portland in keeping the case open after the liquidation committee gave its sanction for the proceedings to be brought. The claim was commenced on 19 December 2012.
The arguments
Analysis
"[T]he damages in an action of tort must have been incurred when the action is brought, except in some cases where they include everything up to the time of trial, and they cannot include any expenses incurred in the action itself. The law considers the extra costs which are disallowed on taxation between party and party as a luxury for which the other party ought in no case to be liable, and they cannot be allowed by way of damages".
"I accept that management time spent on preparing a claim for damages for breach of contract is not recoverable as damages. I also accept that it is not recoverable as costs, and so is irrecoverable. That is the law".
"The work for which damages were awarded [in 4 Eng] had been completed three or four years before the claimant even issued proceedings. There was no question of it having been undertaken in the context of pending litigation."
"38. Now, it is clear that, prior to the introduction of the litigant in person costs provisions, a litigant in person who did not carry on a profession could not recover costs in respect of his time: that, indeed, was precisely why the litigant in person provisions were introduced. The decision of the Court of Appeal in Jonathan Alexander Ltd v Proctor [1996] 1 WLR 518 identified a similar problem in relation to a company represented by a director: it was not possible to recover for time spent because the court had no power to make such an award. CPR Pt 48 now deals with litigants in person: special provision is made for solicitors under CPR r 48.6(6) read with 48PD 52.5. There is no similar provision in the case of other professionals. CPR, r.48.6 and 48PD 52.5 draw no distinction between a litigant who happens to be a professional other than a solicitor (or other person entitled to conduct litigation) and an ordinary litigant in person; they reflect the approach that the London Scottish Benefit Society case (1883-1884) LR 12 QBD 452, (1883-1884) LR 13 QBD 872 (CA) is restricted in its operation to solicitors. In my judgment, that is a correct approach: and it would be an inadmissible extension of that case to treat the principle established by it to other professionals.
39. I reach the same conclusion by another route also. The reasoning in the London Scottish Benefit Society case (see the first three elements discussed by Chadwick L.J. in Malkinson v Trim [2003] 1 WLR 463 (CA)) shows that a solicitor acting in person can only recover for certain costs which he would have been able to recover had he instructed an independent solicitor. It would seem to me that another professional (such as an accountant) should similarly be able to recover as a litigant in person at most for items which he would have been able to recover had he instructed an independent professional (accountant). Whilst he would be able to recover for the cost of any expert advice given by that independent professional, he would not be entitled to recover for the cost of general assistance in the conduct of the litigation. The litigant in person, even if a professional, cannot recover in respect of his time spent other than on matters within his own professional expertise and requiring the attention of an expert.
40. Further, the position of an office-holder is, in my judgment, no different. It may be the case that, in the fulfilment of his duties as an office-holder, he has to bring or defend litigation. The fact that he does so does not mean that it is part of his profession to conduct litigation in the way that it is part of the profession of a solicitor to do so. An office-holder in not unique in this respect: trustees of family trusts or of pension funds have fiduciary duties, the fulfilment of which may require them to bring or defend proceedings. That sort of duty on the part of an office-holder or other fiduciary does not, in my judgment, afford any basis for a difference in treatment, vis-à-vis the payment of costs by an opposing party, from any other litigant.
41. Nor, in my judgment, does the fact that an office-holder's remuneration is ultimately under the control of the insolvency court make any different to the result. The real reason he cannot recover is, I consider, because he is not a professional seeking to recover costs for time spent in respect of his own area of expertise."
"378. My general point is that, before a court will be prepared to impose liability on directors in a case where there has been an unjustified decision to carry on trading, it is not enough for a liquidator claimant merely to say that, if the company had not still been trading, a particular loss would not have been suffered by the company. There must, in my view, be more than a mere 'but for' nexus of that type to connect the wrongfulness of the directors' conduct with the company's losses which the liquidator wishes to recover from them. In many cases the connection will be obvious and may not require any discussion. If the company's business was inherently loss-making, and the directors ought to have known that but unjustifiably turned a blind eye to it, it is plainly appropriate to use the section to seek recovery from them of continued trading losses of precisely the kind which they ought to have known would result if the company carried on with its trading operations.
379. However, not every loss which a company may sustain after the directors have reached a wrongful decision to trade on (or wrongfully failed to consider at all the question of whether to trade on or not) is like that. One of the previous cases under section 214 which was cited to me was re Brian D Pierson (Contractors) Ltd [1999] BCC 26. The judge (Hazel Williamson QC, sitting as a High Court judge) held that the directors were in principle liable under the section, but, from the amounts which she considered that they ought to be required to pay to the company, she sought to exclude the element of worsening of the company's position which was attributable to particularly bad weather conditions of 1994-95. The company's business was to construct and maintain golf courses, so it was vulnerable to bad weather entirely independently of whether the directors took justifiable or unjustifiable decisions about trading on or closing down instead.
380. The well-known decision of the House of Lords in South Australia Asset Management Corporation v York Montague Ltd and associated cases, [1997] AC 191, was not concerned with section 214 but rather with common law principles about damages for negligent valuations, but I am struck by one short sentence in the important speech of Lord Hoffmann (at page 213): 'Normally the law limits liability to those consequences which are attributable to that which made the act wrongful'. I believe that a similar principle has an important role to play in section 214."
Late amendment
"36. An application to amend will be refused if it is clear that the proposed amendment has no real prospect of success. The test to be applied is the same as that for summary judgment under CPR Part 24. Thus the applicant has to have a case which is better than merely arguable. The court may reject an amendment seeking to raise a version of the facts of the case which is inherently implausible, self-contradictory or is not supported by contemporaneous documentation.
37. Beyond that, the relevant principles applying to very late applications to amend are well known. I have been referred to a number of authorities: Swain-Mason v Mills & Reeve [2011] 1 WLR 2735 (at paras. 69 to 72, 85 and 106); Worldwide Corporation Ltd v GPT Ltd [CA Transcript No 1835] 2 December 1988 ; Hague Plant Limited v Hague [2014] EWCA Civ 1609 (at paras. 27 to 33); Dany Lions Ltd v Bristol Cars Ltd [2014] EWHC 928 (QB) (at paras. 4 to 7 and 29); Durley House Ltd v Firmdale Hotels plc [2014] EWHC 2608 (Ch) (at paras. 31 and 32); Mitchell v News Group Newspapers [2013] EWCA Civ 1537.
38. Drawing these authorities together, the relevant principles can be stated simply as follows:
a) whether to allow an amendment is a matter for the discretion of the court. In exercising that discretion, the overriding objective is of the greatest importance. Applications always involve the court striking a balance between injustice to the applicant if the amendment is refused, and injustice to the opposing party and other litigants in general, if the amendment is permitted;
b) where a very late application to amend is made the correct approach is not that the amendments ought, in general, to be allowed so that the real dispute between the parties can be adjudicated upon. Rather, a heavy burden lies on a party seeking a very late amendment to show the strength of the new case and why justice to him, his opponent and other court users requires him to be able to pursue it. The risk to a trial date may mean that the lateness of the application to amend will of itself cause the balance to be loaded heavily against the grant of permission;
c) a very late amendment is one made when the trial date has been fixed and where permitting the amendments would cause the trial date to be lost. Parties and the court have a legitimate expectation that trial fixtures will be kept;
d) lateness is not an absolute, but a relative concept. It depends on a review of the nature of the proposed amendment, the quality of the explanation for its timing, and a fair appreciation of the consequences in terms of work wasted and consequential work to be done;
e) gone are the days when it was sufficient for the amending party to argue that no prejudice had been suffered, save as to costs. In the modern era it is more readily recognised that the payment of costs may not be adequate compensation;
f) it is incumbent on a party seeking the indulgence of the court to be allowed to raise a late claim to provide a good explanation for the delay;
g) a much stricter view is taken nowadays of non-compliance with the CPR and directions of the Court. The achievement of justice means something different now. Parties can no longer expect indulgence if they fail to comply with their procedural obligations because those obligations not only serve the purpose of ensuring that they conduct the litigation proportionately in order to ensure their own costs are kept within proportionate bounds but also the wider public interest of ensuring that other litigants can obtain justice efficiently and proportionately, and that the courts enable them to do so."
The Company Directors' Disqualification Act 1986