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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> Woollard & Anor v Fowler [2005] EWHC 90051 (Costs) (24 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2006/90051.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 90051 (Costs) |
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IN THE WESTON SUPER MARE COUNTY COURT
SITTING AS A DEPUTY DISTRICT JUDGE OF THE COUNTY COURT
London, EC4A 1DQ |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
1) MR I WOOLLARD 2) MRS D WOOLLARD |
Appellants/ Claimants |
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- and - |
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MR R FOWLER |
Respondent /Defendant |
____________________
Mr Benjamin Williams (instructed by QM Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 12 April 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Senior Costs Judge Hurst Sitting as a Recorder
INTRODUCTION AND THE LAW
"(1) The court -
(a) may allow a claim for a disbursement of a type mentioned in paragraph (2); but
(b) but must not allow a claim for any other type of disbursement.
(2) The disbursements referred to in (1) are -
(a) the cost of obtaining -
(i) medical records;
(ii) a medical report;
(iii) a police report;
(iv) an engineer's report; or
(v) a search of the records of the Driver Vehicle Licensing Authority
. . .
(d) any other disbursement that has arisen due to a particular feature of the dispute."
"As he put it in paragraph 7 of his judgment:
the purpose of the rules was to simplify the payment of costs in small cases, not to make it more complex. The fixed recoverable costs are just that; they are fixed. But they are payable by the Defendant whether or not the Claimant's solicitor's retainer is valid. An extra 12.5% is payable if the Claimant and his solicitor entered into a CFA, whether that CFA is valid or not."
So far as the disbursements claimed under CPR45.10 were concerned, he said:
" I am unable to take the same approach to disbursements. It seems to me that, for them, the standard rules, including the familiar Indemnity Principle, continue to apply. I accept that it seems inconsistent to allow what might be invalid profit costs whilst at the same time disallowing unpaid disbursements . . . Nevertheless, I think that the inconsistency arises because Part 45 does not deal with the disbursements in the same way as it deals with profit costs. Disbursements are not fixed by Part 45"
"19. I am advised by the assessors that until the Court of Appeal decision in Hollins v Russell [2003] EWCA Civ 718 numerous technical challenges were made to the validity of Conditional Fee Agreements. As Mr Mallalieu put it, in the course of argument "The history of litigation in this field indicates that disproportionate points were taken.
The problem was addressed in three ways:
20. In Hollins v Russell (see above) the Court of Appeal gave guidance on the approach which should be adopted to technical challenges to Conditional Fee Agreements . . . This guidance was intended to cut down the highly technical arguments based on minor infractions of the conditions.
21. Secondly, there was a change in the law effected by the amendment to Section 51(2) of the [Supreme Court Act] 1981 which significantly modified the Indemnity Principle and permitted changes in the rules to give effect to the modification.
22. Thirdly changes were made to the Rules of Court. Some of these changes and in particular the provisions of sections II to V of CPR 45, were introduced following "industry wide" discussions under the aegis of the Civil Justice Council. Agreement was reached on the recoverable costs in the different situations covered by the various sections.
23. It seems to me clear that the intention underlying CPR 45.7 14 was to provide an agreed scheme of recovery which was certain and easily calculated. This was done by providing fixed levels of remuneration which might over reward in some cases and under reward in others, but which were regarded as fair when taken as a whole.
24. It is clear that in making this change, the draftsmen of the rules, intended that the Indemnity Principle should not apply to the figures which were recoverable. If that is so, I can see little reason why it should be assumed that the Indemnity Principle has any application to CPR 45.9 and 11 and good reasons why it should not . . .
(iii) the whole idea underlying Part 45 section II is that it should be possible to ascertain the appropriate costs payable without the need for further recourse to the court.
25. I should add that in coming to this conclusion:
. . .
(ii) I have rejected the argument that there is an anomaly in that CPR 45.10 requires a different approach. The reason why the costs under CPR 45.10 call for a different approach is that there are no fixed figures for disbursements.
. . ."
THE BACKGROUND
"13. The thrust of Mr Williams' submission was that the fixed recoverable costs regime provides a ceiling for recoverable profit costs and it does not permit work which would usually form part of profit costs to be delegated by the solicitors and claimed as a disbursement instead. He has submitted that when the discussions took place, which led to the negotiated settlement, it was well known that Claimant's and Defendant's solicitors used agencies. Mr Carpenter also stressed this point
. . .
25. the issue which divides the two parties is the extent to which, if at all, charges made by Mobile Doctors Limited for work which a solicitor would otherwise have done can be recovered by way of a disbursement. It is clear from the judgments of His Honour Judge Cook [in Stringer v Copley] and the Senior Costs Judge [in the Claims Direct Test Cases Tranche 2 [2003] EWHC 9005] that, as Mr Williams puts it, any administration element must be excised from the agency's disbursements bill. However, no such charges (as opposed to charges simply for doing the work) have been made in this case. (See the letter from Mobile Doctors Limited dated 8 July 2004).
. . .
32. The wording of CPR 27.14 and CPR 45.10(2)(a) is different. I am unable to accept Mr Carpenter's submission that if Parliament had considered that agency fees were not recoverable the position would have been made clear in the rules. The rule refers specifically to disbursements and not, for example, to "further charges" or "additional costs" in the preceding parts of the rule. In my judgment it is not possible to transfer what would otherwise be a profit cost element of work when carried out by a solicitor into part of a disbursement claimed by a solicitor, where the amount of fixed (profit) costs is limited to the formula set out in CPR 45.9(1). To do so, would disregard the objections which have been raised by Mr Williams. I accept that the rule refers to "obtaining" which means to acquire or secure or have something granted to oneself. The benefit of market forces which allow a reduced fee to be negotiated for repeat work does not, of itself, permit a more liberal interpretation of the rule where there is a clear formula for the recovery of profit costs. If that was permitted, Mr Carpenter's submission could prevail, provided sufficient information was given by MDL (or the appropriate agency) which ensured that any administration element in the fees was eliminated.
33. The Claimant, through Mr Carpenter, is seeking to extend the meaning of disbursement in CPR 45.8 and in CPR 45.10(1)(a) and (b) and (2) to include, in lieu of profit costs, an element of work done by an agency which solicitors would otherwise claim as profit costs. The rule does not state that such recovery is permissible. The level of profit costs is fixed under the rule by a defined formula in CPR 45.9(1). The rule does not contain any provision to enable an element of profit costs work to be subsumed within a disbursement and awarded in lieu of profit costs. The ceiling on profit costs imposed by the rule cannot be exceeded. I therefore reject the argument of Deputy District Judge Ward in Moss v Campbell on which Mr Carpenter has relied."
SUBMISSIONS
"78. The correct treatment of disbursements and profit costs has been the subject of a considerable amount of litigation. Lord Langdale, in the case of Re: Remnant (11 Beav 603, 613), laid down the following rule:
"That those payments only, which are made in pursuance of the professional duty undertaken by a solicitor, and which he is bound to perform, or which are sanctioned as professional payments, by the general and established custom of the profession, ought to be entered and allowed as professional disbursements in the bill of costs."
At that time other payments made by a solicitor as agent for the client were properly recorded in the cash account not in the solicitors bill. Section 67 of the Solicitors Act 1974 now provides, in respect of disbursements:
"A solicitor's bill of costs may include costs payable in discharge of a liability properly incurred by him on behalf of the party to be charged with the bill "
79. And chapter 20 of the Law Society's Guide to the Professional Conduct of Solicitors (Eighth Edition) states at paragraph 20.01:
"Duty to pay agent's fees
A solicitor is personally responsible for paying the proper costs of any professional agent or other person whom he or she instructs on behalf of a client, whether or not the solicitor receives payment from the client, unless the solicitor and the person instructed makes an express agreement to the contrary".
80. It is now not at all uncommon for a solicitor to pay money for services as agent for the client and then to bill the client in respect of that payment. Such a payment is not strictly a professional disbursement but is treated as a disbursement for the sake of convenience. In those cases where the client is able to pay, solicitors frequently ask for money from the client to cover those payments which the solicitor proposes to make on the client's behalf. In my judgment, if any of the MLSS fee is recoverable it should be treated as a disbursement not as part of the solicitors' profit costs. In my view the solicitor can charge as profit costs only that work undertaken by him or a member of his firm in the capacity of solicitor. If a task is delegated to a solicitor agent that too is chargeable as part of the principal solicitor's profit costs. Where tasks are delegated to other non solicitor bodies any charge which those bodies make must be treated as a disbursement incurred by the client through the agency of the solicitor (see In Re Blair & Girling [1906] 2 KB 131 CA). Where a solicitor, for example, instructs an enquiry agent to carry out certain work and perhaps to obtain a witness statement, the enquiry agent's charges will be paid by the solicitor as agent for the client and will be treated as a disbursement in the solicitor's bill. If the enquiry agent fails properly to carry out the solicitor's instructions, or carries them out negligently, the solicitor will not in normal circumstances be liable for the negligence of the enquiry agent and the client may be able to withhold payment of the fee or to pay a reduced fee. (The solicitor may of course have been negligent in his selection of enquiry agent.) If, on the other hand, the solicitor (in his own capacity rather than as agent for the client) instructs another solicitor to act as his agent, for example to interview a distant witness, the solicitor agents' charges are not entered in the solicitor's bill as a disbursement but appear as part of the principal solicitor's profit costs (see paragraph 4.6(9) of the Costs Practice Direction). One of the reasons for this is that the principal solicitor remains liable for the acts of his agent, and another is that any agency charge is borne by the principal solicitor. It forms part of that solicitor's overheads.
110. The position with Mobile Doctors Ltd has been greatly clarified by the evidence of Matthew Game (9A/8/75). Mr Game describes the history of his company and, at paragraphs 21 to 23 of his statement, the involvement of the company with Claims Direct. At paragraph 25 he states (9A/8/82):
"The arrangement between ourselves and Claims Direct as to the fact that we paid any commission and the amount, was a normal commercial arrangement between the two of us and I would expect an arrangement of this nature to exist when anyone was providing bulk work and understand that this is common practice with our competitors in the industry as well. By Claims Direct providing volume referrals we did not need to spend time and money on advertising and promotion.
26. As far as I am aware panel solicitors had no knowledge of this arrangement, nor was there any reason why they should "
114. There is no doubt that MDL carries out a certain amount of correspondence, which, had they not been involved, the solicitor would have had to do. To the extent that this work is carried out at the same or a lower cost than if the solicitor had done it, it is recoverable. The judgment of His Honour Judge Cook in Stringer v Copley (Authorities/4) is trite costs law. I agree with Judge Cook that there is no principle which precludes the fees of a medical agency being recoverable between the parties provided it is demonstrated that their charges do not exceed the reasonable and proportionate costs of the work if it had been done by the solicitors. There may however be, within MDL's fixed charge, an element in the nature of an administration fee which is not recoverable. Mr Charlton argues that if the fee charged is reasonable the court should look no further but merely allow the fee as claimed. I further agree with Judge Cook when he states (at p.8):
" It is important that [medical agencies] invoices should distinguish between the medical fee and their own charges, the latter being sufficiently particularised to enable the costs officer to be satisfied that they do not exceed the reasonable and proportionate costs of the solicitors doing the work."
115. The Judge also raises concerns about the proper treatment of VAT. I part company with the Judge in his finding that the fees of medical support agencies "could also be treated as though the work had been done by the solicitors and charged accordingly". For the reasons I have already given (at paragraphs 78 to 80) I am of the view that such expenditure should be treated as a disbursement. I am reinforced in that view when it is remembered that a large part of the MDL fee is that charged by the expert. The expert's fee cannot on any reading be part of the solicitor's profit costs. Judge Cooke based his view on the decision in Smith Graham (A Firm) v The Lord Chancellor's Department [1999] NLJ R1443 QBD. The basis of that decision (on which I sat as an assessor with Mrs Justice Hallett) was that the retired police officer could be treated for the time being as the temporary employee of the solicitors who throughout remained responsible for the conduct of the case and for the conduct of the retired police officer."
"69. The right to payment in respect of disbursements is defined by rule 48.6(3)(a). It is the right to be allowed costs for the same categories of disbursements which would have been allowed if the disbursements had been made by a legal representative on the litigant in person's behalf
73. It is true that the rule refers to costs which would have been allowed as a disbursement if the disbursement had been made by a legal representative. But this does not require the court to make a fanciful hypothesis as to what disbursements a legal representative might have made. The rule contemplates allowing as costs only those categories of disbursements which would normally have been made by a legal representative. If the expenditure is for work which a legal representative would normally have done himself, it is not a disbursement within the language of CPR 48.6(3)(ii).
74. A clear distinction has always been recognised between disbursements made and work done by a legal representative. The fact that an element of the legal representative's work is delegated to a third party does not mean that it may be regarded as a disbursement. The point can be illustrated by reference to the treatment of solicitors who employ the services of other solicitors to act as their agents. The charges of such agents are not allowable as disbursements, and must always be itemised as part of the principal solicitor's bill of costs. This was made clear, for example, in In re Pomeroy & Tanner [1897] 1 Ch 284. A country solicitor had employed a London agent. The country solicitor delivered a bill of costs to his client. It included a lump sum for the agent's fees. It was contended that they were recoverable as a disbursement and there was no need to deliver a detailed statement of the agent's charges. This contention was rejected by Stirling J. He said at p 287:
"What is done by the London agent is part of the work done by the country solicitor for the client. The country solicitor does or may do part of the work personally. He does or may do part of his work through clerks whom he employs in the country. Or, if necessary--and the necessity occurred in this casehe may do part of his work through a London agent. But as between the country solicitor and the client, the whole of the work is done by the country solicitor. It follows, therefore, that the items which make up the London agent's bill are not mere disbursements, but are items taxable in the strictest sense as between the client and the country solicitor, just as much as items in respect of work done by the country solicitor personally, or by the clerk whom he employs in the country."
75. It follows in our view that the appellant is not entitled to recover costs as a disbursement in respect of work done by Tenon which would normally have been done by a solicitor who had been instructed to conduct the appeal. This means that the appellant is not entitled to recover for the cost of Tenon providing general assistance to counsel in the conduct of the appeals.
76. But it seems to us that it does not necessarily follow that the appellant is not entitled to recover costs in respect of the ancillary assistance provided by Tenon in these appeals. Mr Mills is an accountant who has expertise in tax matters, especially in the kind of issues that arose in the present case. It may be appropriate to allow the appellant at least part of Tenon's fees as a disbursement. It may be possible to argue that the cost of discussing the issues with counsel, assisting with the preparation of the skeleton argument etc is allowable as a disbursement, because the provision of this kind of assistance in a specialist esoteric area is not the kind of work that would normally be done by the solicitor instructed to conduct the appeals. Another way of making the same point is that it may be possible to characterise these specialist services as those of an expert, and to say for that reason that the fees for these services are in principle recoverable as a disbursement."
"I can confirm that our invoice totalling £547.46 is for all of the above work and does not contain any element of an administration fee. However, it does contain £275 that has been paid to the examiner, £40 to the GP and £14 to the hospital.
As you can see from this breakdown had a solicitor undertaken this work the cost of providing the report would have been in the region of £628.74. I trust this demonstrates that MDL's fees are reasonable in line with Master Hurst's judgment."
"Obtaining medical reports is solicitor's work, a necessary incident, in a claim of this kind, to their contract of retainer. They would not be able to recover any additional costs under the regime if they did the work themselves, but it is said that they may outsource it in order to avoid this limitation. In this way, use of medical agencies, which has always been justified as a means of saving costs, is used instead to justify increasing them, all in the context of a regime which was created with the specific intent of controlling costs."
"I have been helpfully referred to a number of authorities which establish that whether someone is to be regarded as a fee earner is very much a question of fact to be determined in each individual case.
On the facts of this case, despite the limited nature of the information before me, I am satisfied that the nature of the work Mr Fryer was instructed to do here was work which was appropriate for a fee earner to do. I doubt that anyone would have considered it inappropriate in a case such as this for the solicitor in charge of the case or someone similar to have carried out the work himself and to make a direct charge to the client. The fact that Mr Fryer was not actually employed by the solicitor either as a full time or part time employee does not in my judgment exclude him from the definition of fee earner.
Having considered Mr Fryer's background and the services he offers, I have no doubt that Mr Fryer comes within the definition of someone who may be instructed to do fee earning work. Attending at council offices to examine important documents with the lay client is clearly "fee earning work".
I am satisfied, therefore, that in the circumstances of this case Mr Fryer does come within the definition of "fee earner" within the Regulations."
"As a postscript in view of my finding in respect of the litigation support agency, it would appear that the fees of medical support agencies could also be treated as though the work had been done by the solicitors and charged accordingly."
CONCLUSION
"The whole idea underlying Part 45 Section 2 is that it should be possible to ascertain the appropriate costs payable without the need for further recourse to the court."