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England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> Sharif v The Law Society [2005] EWHC 90018 (Costs) (08 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2005/90018.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 90018 (Costs) |
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SUPREME COURT COSTS OFFICE
MASTER ROGERS, COSTS JUDGE
London, EC4A 1DQ |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SAMEERA SHARIF (female) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE LAW SOCIETY |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Stephen Wade of Wright Son & Pepper (agent for Gordons) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 28 October 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Master Rogers:
THE ISSUE
THE BACKGROUND
THE BILLS
Date | Invoice No. | Amount | Date Paid |
27 February 2004 | 44793 | £34,475.49 | 8 April 2004 |
19 March 2004 | 56012 | £39,587.00 | 26 April 2004 |
31 March 2004 | 56171 | £9,958.72 | 20 May 2004 |
30 April 2004 | 56665 | £13,569.75 | 21 May 2004 |
28 May 2004 | 56937 | £4,754.88 | 2 August 2004 |
21 June 2004 | 57041 | £894.88 | 6 December 2004 |
28 July 2004 | 57932 | £1,492.25 | 3 December 2004 |
27 August 2004 | 57725 | £754.35 | 12 January 2005 |
29 October 2004 | 301464 | £637.75 | 22 November 2004 |
17 December 2004 | 302371 | £1,952.28 | 22 March 2005 |
21 March 2005 | 107489 | £61.02 | 8 June 2005 |
28 February 2005 | 303765 | £1,283,78 | 29 March 2005 |
20 June 2005 | 151512 | £795.17 | 19 July 2005 |
THE POINTS I HAD TO DECIDE
i) Joinder
ii) Should the bills be sent for detailed assessment? ;
iii) If so, on what terms?
JOINDER
WERE THE BILLS INTERIM BILLS OR INTERIM STATUTE BILLS?
"We were referred to one or two cases on this point. First in re: Romer & Haslem [1983] 2 QB 286: and the latest was a case in this court on March 6, 1980, of Davidsons v Jones-Fenleigh, The Times, March 11, 1980. Putting it quite shortly, as Bowen LJ said [1893] 2 QB 286, 298, it is a question of fact whether there are natural breaks in the work done by a solicitor so that each portion of it can and should be treated as a separate and distinct part in itself, capable of and rightly being charged separately and taxed separately. Applying that simple test, it seems to me that over this short time – the end of November 1978 to the beginning of May 1979 – this was one continuous dealing and work done by a solicitor, not dividing itself naturally or otherwise into any breaks at all. When the bills were delivered, they were delivered each time as part of the running account – "account rendered" being carried on in each to the next. I agree with the judge on this point too that this should be regarded as one bill in respect of one complete piece of work, although divided into parts. As this is one bill, and the client demanded taxation within the month, he is entitled to have the whole of it taxed".
"Further, it would be inappropriate and costly for our client to seek detailed assessment until such time as a final invoice is rendered by your Agent. This will avoid the costs of multiple applications and hearings which our client ill afford. You will also accept, no doubt, that a period of time ought to be given following receipt of the final invoice in which negotiations in respect of costs can take place".
"Thank you for your letter of 3 June 2004. The advice that you give to your client in respect of when she makes an application for detailed assessment of intervention agents' costs is, of course, a matter for you".
ALLEGED NON-DELIVERY OF CERTAIN BILLS
"I am of the opinion that there has been no proper delivery in this case of the bills of costs, to tax which the common order has been obtained. Delivery on which to found a taxation must be a delivery to the party chargeable, that is to the client. Here the bills were sent, not to Mr Gorely, Mr Abbott's client, but as a mere matter of courtesy to Mr Bebb, the solicitor of the mortgagor whose party is ultimately liable to pay them".
"SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES"
"11. In April 2004 I became pregnant with my third child. I suffered a difficult pregnancy, as I suffered a lot of stress due to the above situation. My health was greatly affected and I had a difficult birth in January 2005. There has been immense pressure on me personally since the intervention as I have paid hundreds and thousands of pounds in legal fees and the firm's debts alone. I have had a very difficult time in the last year and a half, and I am suffering from depression. Out of the firm of four partners, only one partner has had to face the brunt of the Law Society. I have found it extremely difficult to cope with such pressures and on top of it all, to look after three children all under the age of four years.
12. My family life, my health and my career have greatly suffered. I have suffered huge financial loss.
13. The Law Society have been very unfair with me. During the last nine months before the intervention, I was on maternity leave with my second child, however, the Law Society has only targeted me and not any of the other partners who, in my opinion, are jointly and severally (sic) liable according to the Law Society's own rules".
"32. Finally, I would add this. I have decided that there is a discretion. This, however, a discretion be exercised in circumstances where the court is required to have regard to the fact that there would be no power to order a taxation on the application of the chargeable party. It will, therefore, in my Judgment, be for the applicant, who is interested in the chargeable property, to persuade the court that it should nonetheless order a taxation at his request, and that the considerations of finality which justify the rule in respect of the chargeable party should not prevail upon the present application. In my Judgment some special circumstances precluding a more time consuming application would have to be shown to invoke the court's discretion….".
TERMS UPON WHICH A DETAILED ASSESSMENT MIGHT HAVE BEEN ORDERED
"16. Assuming I am wrong about that and assuming that none of these bills have been paid within 12 months of April 2004, then it seems to me that there is a prima facie case for detailed assessment. I derive that not so much from the size of the bills, although the size of the bills is large, but from the possibility of duplication with other bills. Had Mr Simms not been limited by section 70(4), not limited by that stumbling point, I would have allowed detailed assessment of all of the bills on terms. Those terms would ordinarily be on payment of, for example, half of the bills or, if one was being less bullish about them, half of the bills plus all the VAT included in the bills. Of course, that is the sort of order imposed in McPherson v Bevan Ashworth [2003] 3 Costs LR 389 and it is a fairly standard approach in this office".
CONCLUSION
"I do not believe there is any unfairness in him losing his section 71 rights. There is every fairness in him being made to pay Russell-Cooke's costs, but only to the extent that they are reasonable; and the people best placed to assess the reasonableness of Russell-Cooke's costs are the Costs Judges. Although Mr Simms is the loser today, he will seek to rely on what I have said in order to slow down or halt insolvency proceedings or in order to block any debt proceedings or the full sum without an assessment, but that is for the future".
"48. As indicated, we spent a considerable time looking at this issue, and the conclusion which I have reached is that, odd though the distinction may seem to be, the present position is that if a client, or former client, seeks assessment under section 70 more than 12 months after the bill has been paid, then Harrison v Tew is fatal to such a claim. If, on the other hand, the solicitor seeks to bring an action on the bill, the client, or former client, can raise as a defence over-payment, and so forth, even outside the primary 12 month period, and so obtain an order for detailed assessment of the bill(s).
49. Since the Claimant here is relying on its section 70 rights, I conclude that, in respect of all the bills which have been paid more than 12 months before the date this application was issued, the Claimant cannot obtain an order for assessment, whatever merits it may have".