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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> King & Ors v Stiefel & Ors [2023] EWHC 453 (Comm) (02 March 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2023/453.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 453 (Comm) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) ANTHONY DOUGLAS KING (2) JAMES PATRICK KING (3) SUSAN MAY KING |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) BARRY STIEFEL (2) ROBIN FISHER (3) PETER SWAIN (4) PRIMEKINGS HOLDING LIMITED (5) CLARE VICTORIA TOOMER (6) RODERICK JOHN COWPER (7) PETER DAVID LEVINGER (8) TEACHER STERN LLP (10) JACOB ISAAC RABINOWICZ |
Defendants/ Applicants |
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- and - |
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(1) CHRISTOPHER NEWMAN (2) METIS LAW |
Respondents |
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Daniel Lightman KC (instructed by Kennedys LLP) for the 5th to 9th Applicants
John Taylor KC and Nathalie Koh (instructed by Womble Bond Dickinson (UK) LLP) for the 1st Respondent
William Flenley KC and Richard Sage (instructed by Beale & Co LLP) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing dates: 7th and 8th December 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
INDEX
Section | Para Number |
A: Introduction | 1 |
B: Factual and procedural background | 8 |
C: The judgment of Cockerill J | 34 |
D: The grounds of the wasted costs applications | 56 |
E: Legal principles in relation to wasted costs applications | 68 |
F: Threshold issue – suitability for summary determination? | 95 |
G: The merits of the application and the individual grounds | 135 |
G1: Introduction | 135 |
G2: No pleaded of pleadable cause of action – the costs conspiracy | 143 |
G3: The costs abuse ground | 163 |
G4: CPR 38.7/abuse of process | 164 |
G5: The threat case | 171 |
G6: Failure by Metis Law to comply with the pre-action protocol | 182 |
G7: The case generally against Metis Law | 185 |
Conclusion | 186 |
MR JUSTICE JACOBS :
A: Introduction
"The judge demonstrated, in a conspicuously detailed and patient judgment, that this claim is thoroughly misconceived. She dealt at length with all of the matters which the applicants now seek to raise in their grounds of appeal. For the most part, the applicants simply fail to engage with her reasoning, which is entirely convincing. I have reached the firm conclusion that an appeal would have no real prospect of success. It is unnecessary in these circumstances to say much about each of the applicants' individual grounds. The applicants are or should be well aware of where their claim has been struck out and why an appeal would not succeed. The have merely to read the judgment."
"5.5 It is appropriate for the court to make a wasted costs order against a legal representative, only if –
(a) the legal representative has acted improperly, unreasonably or negligently;
(b) the legal representative's conduct has caused a party to incur unnecessary costs, or has meant that costs incurred by a party prior to the improper, unreasonable or negligent act or omission have been wasted;
(c) it is just in all the circumstances to order the legal representative to compensate that party for the whole or part of those costs.
5.6 The court will give directions about the procedure to be followed in each case in order to ensure that the issues are dealt with in a way which is fair and simple and summary as the circumstances permit.
5.7 As a general rule the court will consider whether to make a wasted costs order in two stages –
(a) at the first stage the court must be satisfied –
(i) that is has before it evidence or other material which, if unanswered, would be likely to lead to a wasted costs order being made; and
(ii) the wasted costs proceedings are justified notwithstanding the likely costs involved;
(b) at the second stage, the court will consider, after giving the legal representative an opportunity to make representations in writing or at a hearing, whether it is appropriate to make a wasted costs order in accordance with paragraph 5.5 above."
B: Factual and procedural background
(1) The Primekings Parties had commenced detailed assessment proceedings, and Master Whalan had refused a stay. The detailed assessment had not, however, been carried out;
(2) The Kings had recently issued and served the Professional Negligence Action;
(3) The s 994 proceedings, which had been commenced in April 2018, were subject to a strike-out application recently submitted by the relevant Primekings Parties, but yet to be determined.
"The First to Ninth Defendants have unlawfully conspired to provide false and inflated cost information (including artificial costs budgets) to the Claimants and the Court with a view to causing damage to the Claimants by (a) improperly pressurising the Claimants and their legal team with improper threats of adverse costs (b) obtaining an improper payment on account of costs in favour of the Second to Fourth Defendants in the sum of £1.7m by misleading Marcus Smith J, which payment on account vastly exceeded the actual costs spent."
i. Providing false information to a costs draftsman and attempting to launder that false information by submitting it to a Master;
ii. Presenting a fraudulently inflated bill of costs to the Senior Courts Costs Office;
iii. Ensuring the Kings were not provided with any information about the costs fraud;
iv. Deploying a cynical and determined strategy of delay and obfuscation aimed at ensuring that the Kings are bankrupted by interim costs orders before key evidence of fraud emerges from third parties, in order to stifle this claim;
v. Intimidating the Kings and their lawyers to prevent this claim being brought or decided on its facts.
i. To pressure the Kings' legal team to discontinue the claim by misleading the Kings into believing they would face adverse costs more than Primekings knew they would incur, and using threatening conduct (the so-called "Discontinuance Goal");
ii. To enrich Primekings by falsely inflating costs that would be incurred to obtain the Kings' shares in KSGL at an undervalue (the so-called "Enrichment Goal"); and
iii. To cover up the above (the so-called "Cover-Up Goal").
"I think were that the only point he would be absolutely right, because that is a point which was susceptible of very serious argument. I came to a very clear view, but it was susceptible of serious argument".
"The claim lacked rational basis at the very first stage. There was no properly pleadable cause of action because each claim lacked at least one constituent element. I think my conclusion is that the claim was totally without merit at that stage. When one adds to it that there was an element of the argument on abuse as well, that might add something, but it really stands or falls on that first part. So I am going to certify this case as having been totally without merit".
(1) The identities of Mr Newman and Metis Law be anonymised and not disclosed to any third parties pending the Stage 1 hearing. (Following argument at the beginning of the Stage 1 hearing, I considered it appropriate that this anonymity provision should be lifted);
(2) the Applicants file and serve written statements of grounds, identifying "what each Respondent is alleged to have done or failed to do and the costs which are sought against each Respondent"; such grounds to be supported by any evidence to be relied upon;
(3) the wasted costs applications be listed for a Stage 1 hearing before Cockerill J, with the hearing to be held in private; and
(4) any application for Cockerill J to recuse herself to be made no later than 28 days after the statement of grounds had been filed and served. (Mr Taylor's skeleton for the consequentials hearing had submitted that Cockerill J should recuse herself.)
"In relation to how we proceed: I am not entirely happy with the idea of proceeding in this format, whether or not I am the judge involved, because of the complexity of the applications which are being made against the factual background, bearing in mind the importance of fairness; bearing in mind the importance of those acting for the recipients of the application being able to understand exactly the case which has to be met. I have in my mind the analogy to committal proceedings where one needs to set out specific acts of contempt and I also have in mind, of course, the causation aspect which although it is a matter for the second stage, there is authority…which indicates that at the beginning it is incumbent upon the applicant to provide the court with evidence of the costs incurred as a result of the specific conduct relied upon, and that concern which I have about this format ties in with the point about permission to appeal and so I will require, if it is me who deals with this, some persuasion that that is the right way to go."
"2. Having said that the Applicants will no doubt have taken on board the points that:
i. the case advanced has to be clear enough to enable the Respondents to understand the case they have to meet and prepare for the hearing;
ii. and in the case of a complex wasted costs application with potentially multiple alternative claims a lack of clarity as to individual claims and causative links between breaches and costs may render the Stage 1 hurdle harder to meet."
"I would like the respondents to the applications to consider whether it is actually not in their interests for me to hear the application for the reason that if you go with another judge they will read my judgment perhaps more as, not quite containing holy writ, but as being a thing fixed than I might be inclined to do. I have tried in the judgment to make clear that my criticisms were based on what was known to me, and were I to hear any application for a wasted costs order I would be well open to persuasion that if I have gone too far in the judgment I should accept that, but certainly none of my colleagues can have the in-depth knowledge which I have, and that is possibly going to make them less inclined to divert(?)[1] through the judgment and less inclined, perhaps, to have an understanding of the nuances which may positively be helpful to the respondents. It is entirely a matter for the respondents whether they do want to pursue recusal."
C: The judgment of Cockerill J
"The essence of that case is that in the Misrepresentation Claim the Defendants "[intimidated] the claimants and/or their legal team, ...to make them so frightened at the possible consequences of proceeding with the case, that they would withdraw their powerful claim and apologise." In essence, it is said that the Defendants identified mistakes made by the Misrepresentation Team, and threatened to "expose the full extent of the legal team's negligence to the Kings and the Court if the legal team did not cause the Kings to discontinue the case on terms specified by Primekings". This unpleaded threat is at the heart of the Kings' case: The Threat. It is worth pausing here to note that although [35] says that the Kings will rely on threats of a "similar" nature to the Pleaded Threats, the Threat is nothing like those threats."
"All three of the primary/secondary/tertiary professional negligence claims can only work if: (i) the Misrepresentation Team had been negligent and had not advised their clients of that negligence and (ii) the Defendants knew both of the negligence and the lack of its disclosure. Without knowledge there could be no threat. Without knowledge of absence of disclosure there could be no threat (because if the Kings knew, the threat would have no teeth). That is also the underpinning of the Inferred threats."
"Having done the very best I can and considered the argument very carefully I see nothing which amounts to material which could support a proper plea of knowledge".
"i) As regards the main element of the claim (threats causing discontinuance and other losses) the Pleaded Threats are no longer relied on as causative of any loss. The case based on the Pleaded Threats therefore falls to be struck out. Alternatively there is no real prospect of success on it and it would be appropriate to grant summary judgment;
ii) The same would necessarily follow as regards any further "similar" threats –currently suggested but not particularised in the pleading;
iii) As regards the unpleaded claim on the Inferred Threats (assuming it can be properly pursued) the case falls to be struck out/there is no real prospect of success because the case must fail on knowledge in circumstances where the Kings cannot plead any case that the Defendants knew (i) of the Misrepresentation Team's (assumed) negligence; and/or (ii) of the Misrepresentation Team's failure to disclose that (assumed) negligence to the Kings."
"(iv) As regards the subsidiary part of the claim (costs representations) there the case falls to be struck out/there is no real prospect of success because there is no separate loss which arises out of these representations, so there is no complete cause of action to be made out based on these representations. Further there is no real prospect of success of these being held to have caused the discontinuance."
"[432] I therefore conclude that there is nothing in the originally pleaded case which indicates that the substance of the allegations is very strong, such that it would give pause in the context of either the abuse of process arguments or in granting summary judgment.
[433] I have already noted that as regards the pleaded basis for the Threats aspect of the claim I would have concluded that the pleaded case was insufficient to withstand summary judgment on the merits. As regards the Costs aspect of the claim had this claim not already failed (i.e. if there had been a pleaded loss, and had the central contention not been barred by abuse of process) I would regard the claim as weak, but I would probably have granted a conditional order, on the basis that (i) the factual basis was sufficiently complex (ii) there was sufficient evidence of error which might provide a slim basis for such allegations and (iii) those serious allegations would be best and most clearly dealt with at trial."
"[454] It follows that even assuming that the case as referenced in the Note had been pleaded or sought to be pleaded (which it was not) that case provides no basis for an inference of threats which would have more than fanciful prospects of success, and does not come close to the kind of compelling material which might conceivably assist in the context of the abuse of process arguments.
[455] In striking out the claim and/or granting summary judgment I am not therefore by any means stifling a claim which should be heard. What I am doing is bringing a proper conclusion to a claim which is structurally fatally flawed, abusive and lacking in pleadable substance."
D: The grounds of the wasted costs applications
"5. In the circumstances, no reasonably well-informed competent legal practitioner applying their objective professional judgement would have drafted and/or issued and/or served the Claim Form and/or no reasonably well-informed competent legal practitioner applying their objective professional judgement would have drafted and/or served the Particulars of Claim and/or evaluated the chances of success of the Claim as being such as to justify the commencement and/or the continuance of the proceedings. From the outset and, or alternatively, by reason of the various subsequent events which are identified further below, the Barrister and/or the Firm ought reasonably to have appreciated that the litigation in which they were acting constituted an abuse of process (by reason of the Costs Abuse Ground and/or the CPR 38.7/Re-litigation Abuse Ground) and/or was in pursuit of no pleaded or pleadable cause of action (by reason of the No Pleaded (or Pleadable) Cause of Action Ground).
6. Accordingly, by advising the Claimants to proceed with and/or by taking any and all steps to facilitate the issue and/or continued pursuit of the Claim, the Barrister and/or the Firm each acted improperly, unreasonably and/or negligently, including by lending themselves to an abuse of process."
(1) 16 April 2020, when the Points of Reply were served in the detailed costs assessment proceedings (where it was alleged, as an alternative to discontinuance, that the Respondents ought to have advised that the Claim be stayed);
(2) 14 May 2020, when the reverse summary judgment/ strike out application was served (where it was again alleged, as an alternative, that the Respondents should have advised that the Claim be stayed);
(3) 2 June 2020, when the TS Parties' reverse summary judgment/ strike out application was served;
(4) 4 September 2020, when the Primekings Parties' solicitors reserved the right to seek wasted costs;
(5) 29 October 2020, when the judgment of Tom Leech QC was handed down;
(6) 18 November 2020, when the Final Costs Certificates were issued; and
(7) 11 January 2021, when an application was made to rely upon the Final Costs Certificates.
E: Legal principles in relation to wasted costs applications
General principles
i. The word "improper" connotes conduct which would be regarded as improper according to the consensus of professional opinion.
ii. "Unreasonable" connotes conduct which is vexatious or designed to harass the other side, rather than advance the resolution of the case.
iii. "Negligent" does not connote conduct in which all the ingredients of the tort of negligence are present. On the contrary, the word "negligent" should be understood in an untechnical way, to denote failure to act with the competence reasonably to be expected of ordinary members of the profession.
iv. The mere fact that lawyers have pursued a hopeless case or hopeless defence does not mean that their conduct was improper, unreasonable or negligent. It is often the duty of lawyers to put forward a hopeless claim or hopeless defence, if the client has rejected wise advice and insists upon that course of action.
v. Lawyers responding to a claim for wasted costs are put in a difficult position, if their client declines to waive privilege. Accordingly the judge must make full allowance for the inability of those lawyers to tell the whole story.
vi. It is essential for the claiming party to demonstrate a causal link between the improper, unreasonable or negligent conduct complained of and the wasted costs which are claimed.
vii. Wasted costs claims should not be permitted to develop into a costly form of satellite litigation. A wasted costs claim should not be allowed to go forward, if it cannot properly be dealt with by means of a simple and summary procedure and at a cost which is proportionate to the sum claimed.
"But with the benefit of experience over the intervening years, it seems that the passage should be strengthened by emphasising two matters in particular. First, in a situation in which the practitioner is of necessity precluded (in the absence of a waiver by the client) from giving his account of the instructions he received and the material before him at the time of settling the impugned document, the court must be very slow to conclude that a practitioner could have had no sufficient material. Speculation is one thing, the drawing of inferences sufficiently strong to support orders potentially very damaging to the practitioner concerned, is another. The point was well put by Mr George Lawrence QC, sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge in Drums and Packaging Limited v Freeman, unreported, 6th August 1999, when he said at paragraph 43:
'As it happens, privilege having been waived, the whole story has been told. I cannot help wondering whether I would have arrived at the same conclusion had privilege not been waived. It would not have been particularly easy, in that event, to make the necessary full allowance for the firm's inability to tell the whole story. On the facts known to D3 at the time it lodged this application, D3 might very well have concluded that the firm would not be able to avoid a wasted costs order, even on the 'full allowance' basis recommended by Sir Thomas Bingham, MR'.
Only rarely will the court be able to make 'full allowance' for the inability of the practitioner to tell the whole story or to conclude that there is no room for doubt in a situation in which, of necessity, the court is deprived of access to the full facts on which, in the ordinary way, any sound judicial decision must be based. The second qualification is no less important. The court should not make an order against a practitioner precluded by legal professional privilege from advancing his full answer to the complaint made against him without satisfying itself that it is in all the circumstances fair to do so. This reflects the old rule, applicable in civil and criminal cases alike, that a party should not be condemned without an adequate opportunity to be heard. Even if the court were able properly to be sure that the practitioner could have no answer to the substantive complaint, it could not fairly make an order unless satisfied that nothing could be said to influence the exercise of its discretion. Only exceptionally could these exacting conditions be satisfied. Where a wasted costs order is sought against a practitioner precluded by legal professional privilege from giving his full answer to the application, the court should not make an order unless, proceeding with extreme care, it is satisfied (a) that there is nothing that the practitioner could say if unconstrained, to resist the order and (b) that it is in all the circumstances fair to make the order."
Hopeless cases
"In cases where the allegation is that the legal representative pursued a hopeless case, the question was correctly identified by the judge as whether no reasonably competent legal representative would have continued with the action. It is difficult to see how that question can be answered affirmatively unless it can also be said that the legal representative acted unreasonably, which is akin to establishing an abuse of process. That is the concept which seems to me to be the appropriate concept when assessing the exercise of judgment, which is essentially what the legal representative is doing in balancing the various interests which have to be balanced in such a situation. I can see, however, that negligence could be the appropriate word to describe a situation in which it is abundantly plain that the legal representative has failed to appreciate that there is a binding authority fatal to the client's case. That may, of itself, justify making a wasted costs order, although in practice it is difficult to envisage a case in which that situation would have persisted to trial without the other party having drawn the case to the other side's attention."
"[34]…The authorities identify pursuit of a hopeless case as a head requiring separate attention. Once unsuccessful litigation has been brought to an end, hindsight is likely to encourage suggestions that the legal advisers to those who pursued or defended it should not have lent it their assistance, or should not have done so for as long as they did. In Ridehalgh v Horsefield [1994] Ch 205,233F–234F Sir Thomas Bingham MR as he was, giving the judgment of the court, emphasised that a legal representative "is not to be held to have acted improperly, unreasonably or negligently simply because he acts for a party who pursues a claim or a defence which is plainly doomed to fail". The client may, for example, be insisting on giving evidence in support of a view of the facts which the legal representative himself considers and may well have advised has no chance of being accepted. But the legal representative is not the judge, and the client is entitled to have his case on the facts determined by a court.
[35] The Master of the Rolls went on to distinguish cases where a representative lent his assistance to proceedings which were an abuse of the process of the court. The examples he gave were of clear cases, e.g. the pursuit of litigation for reasons unconnected with its success, or the pursuit of dishonest litigation; but he added that: "it is not always easy to distinguish between the hopeless case and the case which amounts to an abuse of the process, but in practice it is not hard to say which is which and if there is doubt the legal representative is entitled to the benefit of it" (p. 234E–F).
[36] In the passages referred to in the previous paragraphs, the court was not directly addressing the problem of negligence in the conduct of litigation. An example of negligence leading to the pursuit of litigation having no prospect of success might, however, be a legal representative pursuing a claim or a defence in ignorance of an authority at the highest level from which no-one aware of it could sensibly have thought that any future court would depart. One would not, I think, speak of the solicitor having abused the process in this context, but his or her negligence could, in my view, be relevant to an application for a wasted costs order.
[41] Where, as in Persaud v Persaud, the gist of the complaint is the pursuit of a hopeless case, the approach to an application for a wasted costs order is, in the absence of any specific indication of negligence, likely to be to consider whether the conduct of the litigation amounted to an abuse of process. But, even that question may, as Latham LJ has said, resolve itself into a general enquiry into whether or not the legal representative pursued a claim or defence which no reasonably competent practitioner could have done. That invokes a test also familiar in cases where negligent conduct is alleged. I note in parenthesis that, when the court in Persaud v Persaud came to the facts, it addressed submissions put in such terms: see e.g. paragraphs 29 and 30."
"It is, however, one thing for a legal representative to present, on instructions, a case which he regards as bound to fail; it is quite another to lend his assistance to proceedings which are an abuse of the process of the court. Whether instructed or not, a legal representative is not entitled to use litigious procedures for purposes for which they were not intended, as by issuing or pursuing proceedings for reasons unconnected with success in the litigation or pursuing a case known to be dishonest, nor is he entitled to evade rules intended to safeguard the interests of justice, as by knowingly failing to make full disclosure on ex parte application or knowingly conniving at incomplete disclosure of documents. It is not entirely easy to distinguish by definition between the hopeless case and the case which amounts to an abuse of the process, but in practice it is not hard to say which is which and if there is doubt the legal representative is entitled to the benefit of it."
"[22] Furthermore, a particular problem arises in circumstances where the privilege of the client is not waived. In those circumstances it will be a very exceptional case indeed where a court will be entitled to infer that a party is abusing the process of the court by pursuing a hopeless case. The reasons are again explained by the Master of the Rolls in Ridehalgh …"
The status of Cockerill J's decision
"It will be a rare case where litigation of an issue which has not previously been decided between the same parties or their privies will amount to an abuse of process".
Reliance by solicitors upon counsel
"In general, though a solicitor is entitled to rely on the advice of counsel properly instructed even if counsel's advice proves to be mistaken or misconceived, the solicitor must not do so blindly: the solicitor must not abdicate his professional responsibility and remains bound to exercise his own independent judgment".
"A solicitor does not abdicate his professional responsibility when he seeks the advice of counsel. He must apply his mind to the advice received. But the more specialist the nature of the advice, the more reasonable is it likely to be for a solicitor to accept it and act on it".
F: Threshold issue -- suitability for summary determination?
The arguments in outline
The case-law
"As a general rule allegations of breach of duty relating to the conduct of the case by a barrister or solicitor with a view to the making of a costs order should be confined strictly to questions which are apt for summary disposal by the court. Failures to appear, conduct which leads to an otherwise avoidable step in the proceedings or the prolongation of a hearing by gross repetition or extreme slowness in the presentation of evidence or argument are typical examples. The factual basis for the exercise of the jurisdiction in such circumstances is likely to be found in facts which are within judicial knowledge because the relevant events took place in court or are facts that can easily be verified. Wasting the time of the court or an abuse of its processes which results in excessive or unnecessary cost to litigants can thus be dealt with summarily on agreed facts or after a brief inquiry if the facts are not all agreed."
"Save in the clearest case, applications against the lawyers acting for an opposing party are unlikely to be apt for summary determination, since any hearing to investigate the conduct of a complex action is itself likely to be expensive and time-consuming. The desirability of compensating litigating parties who have been put to unnecessary expense by the unjustified conduct of their opponents' lawyers is, without doubt, an important public interest, but it is, as the Court of Appeal pointed out in Ridehalgh v Horsefield, at p 226, only one of the public interests which have to be considered.
"The overriding requirements of the procedure to be followed are that any procedure must be fair and must be as simple and summary as fairness permits. Hearings should be measured in hours not in days or weeks. Judges must not reject a weapon which Parliament has intended to be used for the protection of those injured by the unjustifiable conduct of the other side's lawyers, but they must be astute to control what threatens to become a new and costly form of satellite litigation (238G–239A)."
"I cannot emphasise strongly enough the established authority that this is a summary remedy which should be capable of being dealt with in hours rather than days".
Ward LJ had sympathy for the applicants, who had "spent a fortune in this sorry litigation", but nevertheless dismissed the appeal from the refusal of the judge to order wasted costs. He referred to the need for "this form of satellite litigation … to be rigorously confined".
"The wasted costs jurisdiction is salutary as long as it is not allowed to be a vehicle which generates substantial additional costs to the parties. It should not be used to create subordinate or satellite litigation, which is as expensive and as complex as the original litigation. It must be used as a remedy in cases where the need for a wasted costs order is reasonably obvious. It is a summary remedy".
"Despite the best efforts of judges, and dare I say it, textbook writers, the true nature of the wasted costs jurisdiction is still insufficiently appreciated. This is a procedure for dealing with relatively straightforward claims which are capable of summary disposal at a proportionate cost. It is not a vehicle for mounting a complex professional negligence action in circumstances where much of the relevant evidence is obscured from the court's view".
a. In Kagalovsky v Balmore Invest Ltd [2015] EWHC 1337 (QB), Turner J refused a wasted costs application, reasoning at [30] that "the sheer number and variety of allegations and the volume of material generated in support of this application is sufficient of itself to show that the case could not be characterised as "plain and simple"". The stage 1 application was refused because of the "further time and resources which would be involved in proceeding to a substantive determination of this application [which] would be disproportionate and inconsistent with the concept of summary determination" [30]. The Court reasoned that given the stage 1 hearing lasted one day, the stage 2 hearing would likely last around two or three days.
b. In Re Freudiana Holdings Ltd [1995] 11 WLUK 442 the Court of Appeal held that the wasted costs application (which involved points of claim running to over 40 pages) should not have been pursued in light of the "sheer number of allegations [made against the representative]".
c. In Lakatamia at [77] Bryan J found that the application was "worlds away" from a summary determination as "the allegations are of wide scope – they most closely resemble allegations of professional negligence". At [37] he noted that the Stage 1 application had already "resulted in the deployment of very much more than half a day of judicial time" and dismissed the application at that stage.
Discussion
"The answer given [in Ridehalgh] therefore was not to treat the existence of privileged material as an absolute bar to any claim by an opposite party for a wasted costs order but to require the court to take into account the possibility of the existence of such material and to give the lawyers the benefit of every reasonably conceivable doubt that it might raise. So, all that the lawyer has to do is to raise a doubt in the mind of the court whether there might not be privileged material which could affect its decision whether or not to make a wasted costs order and, if so, in what terms and the court must give the lawyer the benefit of that doubt in reaching its decision, including the exercise of its statutory discretion".
As discussed in Section G below, this will in turn have an impact on the question of whether it is likely that a wasted costs order would be made.
G: The merits of the application and the individual grounds
G1: Introduction
G2: No pleaded or pleadable cause of action – the costs conspiracy
"…As regards the Costs aspect of the claim had this claim not already failed (i.e. if there had been a pleaded loss, and had the central contention not been barred by abuse of process) I would regard the claim as weak, but I would probably have granted a conditional order, on the basis that (i) the factual basis was sufficiently complex (ii) there was sufficient evidence of error which might provide a slim basis for such allegations and (iii) those serious allegations would be best and most clearly dealt with at trial."
"The barrister must promote and protect fearlessly and by all proper and lawful means his lay clients' interests: paragraph 203 of the Code of Conduct. Often the decision will depend on circumstantial evidence. It may sometimes be finely balanced. What the decision should be may be a difficult matter of judgment on which reasonable minds may differ." (emphasis supplied)
"the question is whether the barristers' beliefs that they had material which objectively justified the allegations unquestionably fell outside the range of views which could reasonably be entertained. The burden of proof is on the party applying for the wasted costs order".
G3: The costs abuse ground
(1) I do not consider that it was an abuse of process for the costs conspiracy case to be pleaded in March 2020, or that the Respondents acted improperly, unreasonably or negligently in proceeding with the case at that stage.
(2) As far as concerns the position after November 2020, when the Final Costs Certificates were issued, there were substantial arguments to be advanced, and which could reasonably be advanced, as to why the Claim should be permitted to continue. These required considerable thought on the part of Cockerill J. The arguments failed, but it is not likely a wasted costs order would be made on this basis.
G4: CPR 38.7/ abuse of process
G5: The threat case
G6: Failure by Metis Law to comply with the pre-action protocol
G7: The case generally against Metis Law
CONCLUSION
Note 1 The word “divert (?)” appears in the transcript of the hearing. [Back]