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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 >> Peel v Beasley [2007] EWHC 90094 (Costs) (03 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2007/90094.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 90094 (Costs) |
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The Courthouse 1 Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
sitting with
Regional Costs Judge, District Judge Spencer,
and
Lay Assessor, Mr Geoffrey Swain, Solicitor
____________________
RACHAEL CATHERINE PEEL |
Respondent/Claimant |
|
- and - |
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STUART BEASLEY |
Appellant/Defendant |
____________________
Mr Martin Bare (of Morrish & Co) for the Respondent/Claimant
Hearing dates : 9th October 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Grenfell:
"To avoid the sort of elongated, expensive and often sterile arguments that there have been in the past about the amount of the success fee that is reasonable and how the Claimant's solicitor has arrived at an appropriate success fee, taking all the factors into account, which should apply to the assessment of that part of the additional liability"
"This case falls squarely within the confines of CPR 45.11. I do not see any scope for a Claimant arguing for a success fee that exceeds 12½% or a paying party arguing for a success fee that is less.... Unless I am completely missing the point of CPR 45.11 I cannot see any scope for the paying party having any argument about the success fee. Following the point that Mr Bare has made, I am a bit surprised that the paying party has taken the point, having regard historically to the reasoning behind why this new part of the rules was introduced in the first place"
17. Of course if the Appellant succeeds in this argument the Appellant argues that it is then a relevant factor in the exercise of the Court's discretion in respect of whether or not a 12½% success fee is recoverable. It is common ground that once allowed it has to be 12½%.
"In this case we are concerned only with a relatively small personal injuries claim in a road traffic accident. We are not concerned with claims which look as if they will exceed about £5,000, and we are not concerned with any other type of BTE claim. We have no doubt that if a Claimant possesses pre-existing BTE cover which appears to be satisfactory for a claim of that size, then in the ordinary course of things that Claimant should be referred to the relevant BTE insurer"
"With this type of BTE cover with which this case is concerned (which covers both sides costs, where necessary) the cost of processing the claim is more likely to be proportionate to the value of the claim, since there will be no uplift and no ATE premium and the cost of the BTE premium (if identifiable) is treated as an expense incurred in the past which is irrecoverable"
"We have considered carefully the submissions we have received from the ATE Group and the TUC. The former was naturally anxious that we should make no decision which might prejudice development of the fledgling ATE market and drive up ATE premiums which might impede access to justice. APIL also shared this worry. The TUC, for its part, was anxious that we should not imperil the dedicated services Trade Unions and their panel lawyers offer to their members. In the context of these simple small claims with which this Judgment is concerned we do not consider that either of these considerations should impel us to impose on the Defendants and their liability insurers a burden of costs which is disproportionate to both the value and the lack of complexity of the claim. We accept the submissions of the Liability Insurers' Group that it is not in the interests of motorists or the general public that motor liability insurers should have to make unnecessary disbursements which raise premium costs"
33. The amounts of fixed recoverable costs are set out first of all in CPR 45.9. I do not need to recite it but it requires a simple calculation as required by that particular paragraph. It is common ground that it is designed to avoid the intervention of the Court entirely.
"45.10-(l)Thecourt-
(a) may allow a claim for a disbursement of a type mentioned in paragraph (2); but
(b) must not allow a claim for any other type of disbursement.
(2) The disbursements referred to in paragraph (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;
(b) the amount of an insurance premium; or, where a membership organisation undertakes to meet liabilities incurred to pay the costs of other parties to proceedings, a sum not exceeding such additional amount of costs as would be allowed under section 30 in respect of provision made against the risk of having to meet such liabilities;
"membership organisation" is defined in rule 43.2(1)(n))."
"45.11-(1) A claimant may recover a success fee if he has entered into a funding arrangement of a type specified in rule 43.2(k)(i).
(2) The amount of the success fee shall be 12.5% of the fixed recoverable costs calculated in accordance with rule 45.9(1), disregarding any additional amount which may be included in the fixed recoverable costs by virtue of rule 45.9(2)."
"I reached that conclusion for these reasons, first of all the construction placed on CPR 45.11 seems to me to be too slight to produce the obviously wasteful and disproportionate enquiries likely to arise if Mr Mallalieu's [Counsel for the Defendant in that case] construction was correct. Although it uses the word "may", "may" does not have to be "may in the Court's discretion". "May" can mean "may if circumstances permit". In other words, the entitlement to a success fee is conditional upon the circumstances and not upon the Court's discretion".
"However the Respondents submit that once pre-condition (a) has been fulfilled there is no discretion and the Court has to award a 12½% success fee. All the parties submit that the Rules could have been more clearly drafted. CPR 45.11(1) could have put the issue beyond doubt, if for example the word "shall" had been substituted for "may". However the word "may" is often capable of meaning "shall", and particularly so if it follows a pre-condition which has to be fulfilled. It seems to me there is no obstacle in the language to my finding that there is no discretion if that is the proper construction"
"Section in of Part 45 contains a carefully balanced scheme for the award of success fees in road traffic accident cases. The object of the scheme is to provide certainty and avoid litigation over the amount of success fees to be allowed to successful parties"
"It is inherent in the scheme that in some individual cases, the success fee will be unreasonably high and in others unreasonably low. But that is the price that has to be paid for achieving certainty and avoiding litigation over the amount of success fees. Rule 44 cannot be invoked to circumvent the careful structure of Rule 45 and to undermine its objective of achieving certainty"
Note 1 "44.4(1) Where the court to is to assess the amount of costs (whether by summary or detailed assessment) it will assess those costs-
Note 2 "48.3 (2) Where the amount of costs is to be assessed on the standard basis, the court will-
Note 3 "45.8 Subject to rule 45.12, the only costs which are to be allowed are-
(a) on the standard basis; or
but the court will not in either case allow costs which have been unreasonably incurred or are unreasonable in amount." [Back]
(b) on the indemnity basis,
(a) only allow costs which are proportionate to the matters in issue; and
[Back]
(b) resolve any doubt which it may have as to whether costs were reasonably incurred or reasonable and proportionate in amount in favour of the paying party."
(a) fixed recoverable costs calculated in accordance with rule 45.9;
[Back]
(b) disbursements allowed in accordance with rule 45.10; and
(c) a success fee allowed in accordance with rule 45.11."