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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 >> Utting v McBain [2007] EWHC 90085 (Costs) (17 August 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2007/90085.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 90085 (Costs) |
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SUPREME COURT COSTS OFFICE
London, EC4A 1DQ |
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B e f o r e :
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DAVID UTTING |
Appellant (Claimant) |
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- and - |
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PHILIP McBAIN |
Respondent (Defendant) |
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Mrs Victoria Butler-Cole (Counsel) (instructed by Brodie and Company) for the Respondent/Defendant
Hearing date: 27 June 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Master Campbell:
"BY CONSENT
IT IS ORDERED:
1. The Claimant's Bill of Costs arising from the accident that occurred on the 5th May 2000 be the subject of a detailed assessment on the standard rate basis to be assessed if not agreed, such assessment to take place at the Supreme Court Costs Office.
2. The costs of the Part 8 Proceedings also be the subject of a detailed assessment on the standard basis to be assessed by the Supreme Court Costs Office if not agreed and paid by the Defendants to the Claimant."
BACKGROUND
THE LAW
"3. Requirements for contents of Conditional Fee Agreements providing for success fees
(1) A Conditional Fee Agreement which provides for a success fee - (a) must briefly specify the reasons for setting the percentage increase at the level stated in the agreement, and (b) must specify how much of the percentage increase, if any, relates to the costs to the legal representative of the postponement of the payment of his fees and expenses; …
(3) In this regulation 'percentage increase' means the percentage by which the amount of the fees which would be payable if the agreement were not a Conditional Fee Agreement is to be increased under the agreement."
THE CONDITIONAL FEE AGREEMENT
"This agreement is a binding legal contract between you and your solicitor. Before you sign please read everything carefully …
Words like 'our disbursements', 'basic charges', 'win' and 'lose', are explained in condition 3 of the Law Society Conditions which you should also read carefully …
What is covered by this agreement
? Your claim for damages for personal injury suffered to your son, David, on 5 May 2000 …
Paying us
If you win your claim, you pay our basic charges, our disbursements and a success fee. The amount of these is not based on or limited by the damages. You are entitled to seek recovery from your opponent of part or all of our basic charges, our disbursements, a success fee and insurance premium. Please also see conditions 4 and 6.
It may be that your opponent makes a part 36 offer or payment which you reject and, on our advice, your claim for damages goes ahead to trial where you recover damages that are less than that offer or payment. We will not add our success fee to the basic charges for the work done after we receive notice of the offer or payment.
If you receive interim damages, we may require you to pay our disbursements at that point and a reasonable amount for our future disbursements …
If you win but on the way lose an interim hearing, you may be required to pay your opponent's charges of that hearing…
If you end this agreement before you win or lose, you pay our basic charges…
Success Fee
This is 100 per cent of our basic charges.
The reasons for calculating the success fee at this level are set out in Schedule 1 to this agreement.
You cannot recover from your opponent the part of the success fee that relates to the costs to us of postponing receipt of our charges and disbursements (as set out at paragraphs (a) and (b) at Schedule 1. This part of the success fee remains payable by you.
Schedule 1
The success fee is set at 100 per cent of the basic charges and cannot be more than 100 per cent of the basic charges. The percentage reflects the following:
(a) the fact that if you win we will not be paid our basic charges until the end of the claim;
(b) our arrangements with you about paying disbursements;
(c) the fact that if you lose we will not earn anything;
(d) our assessment of the risks of your case …
Schedule 2
3. Explanation of words used
(b) Basic charges: Our charges for the legal work we do on your claim for damages…
(l) Success Fee: Percentage of basic charges….
4. What happens if you win?
- You will not be entitled to recover from your opponent the part of the success fee that relates to the cost to us of postponing receipt of our charges and our disbursements. This remains payable by you.
THE SUBMISSIONS FOR MR UTTING
"I accept that nothing is said in the agreement about deferment of payment and what percentage, if any, the client will be liable for."
"In my judgment Regulation 3(1) of the 2000 Regulations is perfectly clear. The CFA must specify how much of the percentage increase relates to the cost of postponement. In my view the words "if any" do not mean that if the deferral element is nil there is no need to mention it. Those words are there to ensure that the client is left in no doubt as to the position even if the deferral element in nil".
"Dear Kathleen
David's accident
There is another matter that I wish to raise with you and that concerns the funding of the claim that I am making on David's behalf …
I am happy to recommend that you enter into a Conditional Fee Agreement with this firm, that is a "no win no fee" agreement. Under such an agreement you do not pay any costs even on conclusion of the case because the costs, together with the success fee written into the agreement are all recoverable. This was not the position in August last year.
I am enclosing such an agreement for your consideration together with notes of advice. The advantage of this agreement means that you are not liable for any costs whatever happens and on conclusion of the case - assuming of course David recovers damages – then my firm recovers the costs that have been incurred together with the success fee from the insurance company …
Yours sincerely
CHRISTOPHER TURNER".
"The reality therefore is that, despite what is said in the risk assessment calculation none of the recoverable success fees is attributable to the postponement in payment of a solicitor's fees".
THE SUBMISSIONS FOR THE RESPONDENT
"If paras 106 and 107 [of Hollins] are read as a whole, the court was saying that, if there has been a failure of substantial compliance or a material departure from what is required by the Regulations, that failure or departure of itself has a material adverse effect on the protection afforded to the client or upon the proper administration of justice".
DECISION
"In our view, it is fallacious to say that a breach is trivial or not material because it does not cause loss to the client in the particular case. The scheme has the wider purpose of providing for client protection (as well as the proper administration of justice)."
"Nor do we accept that the 2000 Regulations should be construed narrowly because of their potentially draconian effect on solicitors. The purpose of the 2000 Regulations is to protect clients not the financial interests of solicitors."
CONCLUSION